Kyocera KWC-K33B04 Tri-band CDMA Cellular phone with Bluetooth User Manual 82 K6572 1EN

Kyocera Communications, Inc Tri-band CDMA Cellular phone with Bluetooth 82 K6572 1EN

Users Manual

Draft
ii
S4000 User Guide
This manual is based on the production version of
the Kyocera S4000 phone. Software changes may
have occurred after this printing. Kyocera reserves
the right to make changes in technical and product
specifications without prior notice. The products
and equipment described in this documentation are
manufactured under license from QUALCOMM
Incorporated under one or more of the following
U.S. patents:
4,901,307 5,109,390 5,267,262 5,416,797 5,506,865
5,544,196 5,657,420 5,101,501 5,267,261 5,414,796
5,504,773 5,535,239 5,600,754 5,778,338 5,228,054
5,337,338 5,710,784 5,056,109 5,568,483 5,659,569
5,490,165 5,511,073
The Kyocera Wireless Corp. (“KWC”) products
described in this manual may include copyrighted
KWC and third party software stored in
semiconductor memories or other media. Laws in
the United States and other countries preserve for
KWC and third party software providers certain
exclusive rights for copyrighted software, such as
the exclusive rights to distribute or reproduce the
copyrighted software. Accordingly, any copyrighted
software contained in the KWC products may not
be modified, reverse engineered, distributed or
reproduced in any manner not permitted by law.
Furthermore, the purchase of the KWC products
shall not be deemed to grant—either directly or by
implication, estoppel, or otherwise—any license
under the copyrights, patents, or patent
applications of KWC or any third party software
provider, except for the normal, non-exclusive
royalty-free license to use that arises by operation
of law in the sale of a product.
Kyocera is a registered trademark of Kyocera
Corporation. Brick Attack and Race 21 are
trademarks of Kyocera Wireless Corp.
QUALCOMM is a registered trademark of
QUALCOMM Incorporated.
Openwave is a trademark of Openwave Systems
Incorporated. eZiText is a registered trademark of
Zi Corporation. TransFlash is a trademark of
SanDisk Corporation. Bluetooth trademarks are
owned by Bluetooth SIG, Inc. and used by Kyocera
Wireless Corp. under license.
All other trademarks are the property of their
respective owners.
Copyright © 2008 Kyocera Wireless Corp.
All rights reserved.
Ringer Tones Copyright © 2000-2008
Kyocera Wireless Corp.
82-K6572-1EN, Rev. 001
FCC notice
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. To maintain compliance with
FCC RF exposure guidelines, if you wear a handset
on your body, use the Kyocera Wireless Corp.
(KWC) supplied and approved standard case
CV90-P0321-01 and premium case CV90-P0323-
01.
Other accessories used with this device for
body-worn operations must not contain any metallic
components and must provide at least 15mm
separation distance including the antenna and the
user’s body.
THIS MODEL PHONE MEETS THE
GOVERNMENT’S REQUIREMENTS FOR
EXPOSURE TO RADIO WAVES.
Your wireless phone is a radio transmitter and
receiver. It is designed and manufactured to not
exceed the emission limits for exposure to radio
frequency (RF) energy set by the Federal
Communications Commission of the U.S.
Government. These limits are part of
Draft
User Guide iii
comprehensive guidelines and establish permitted
levels of RF energy for the general population. The
guidelines are based on standards that were
developed by independent scientific organizations
through periodic and thorough evaluation of
scientific studies. The standards include a
substantial safety margin designed to assure the
safety of all persons, regardless of age and health.
The exposure standard for wireless mobile phones
employs a unit of measurement known as the
Specific Absorption Rate, or SAR. The SAR limit set
by the FCC is 1.6 W/kg.*
Tests for SAR are conducted using standard
operating positions specified by the FCC with the
phone transmitting at its highest certified power
level in all tested frequency bands.
Although the SAR is determined at the highest
certified power level, the actual SAR level of the
phone while operating can be well below the
maximum value. This is because the phone is
designed to operate at multiple power levels so as
to use only the power required to reach the network.
In general, the closer you are to a wireless base
station antenna, the lower the power output.
Before a phone model is available for sale to the
public, it must be tested and certified by the FCC
that it does not exceed the limit established by the
government-adopted requirement for safe
exposure. The tests are performed in positions and
locations (e.g., at the ear and worn on the body) as
required by the FCC for each model.
Body-worn measurements differ among phone
models, depending upon availability of accessories
and FCC requirements. While there may be
differences between the SAR levels of various
phones and at various positions, they all meet the
government requirement for safe exposure.
The FCC has granted an Equipment Authorization
for this model phone with all reported SAR levels
evaluated as in compliance with the FCC RF
emission guidelines. SAR information on this model
phone is on file with the FCC and can be found
under the Display Grant section
http://www.fcc.gov/oet/ea/ after searching on the
FCC ID: OVFKWC-K33B04.
Additional information on SAR can be found on the
Cellular Telecommunications and Internet
Association (CTIA) web-site at
www.wow-com.com.
* In the United States and Canada, the SAR limit for
mobile phones used by the public is 1.6 watts/kg
(W/kg) averaged over one gram of tissue. The
standard incorporates a substantial margin of
safety to give additional protection for the public
and to account for any variations in measurements.
Bluetooth® Certification
For information about S4000 Bluetooth
Certification, visit the Bluetooth Qualification
Program Web site at qualweb.bluetooth.org.
Caution
The user is cautioned that changes or modifications
not expressly approved by the party responsible for
compliance could void the warranty and user’s
authority to operate the equipment.
Optimizing your phone’s performance
Use the guidelines in this guide to learn how to
optimize the performance and life of your phone
and battery.
Air bags
If you have an air bag, DO NOT place installed or
portable phone equipment or other objects over the
air bag or in the air bag deployment area. If
equipment is not properly installed, you and your
passengers risk serious injury.
Medical devices
Pacemakers—Warning to pacemaker wearers:
Wireless phones, when in the ‘on’ position, have
been shown to interfere with pacemakers. The
phone should be kept at least six (6) inches away
Draft
iv
from the pacemaker to reduce risk.
The Health Industry Manufacturers Association and
the wireless technology research community
recommend that you follow these guidelines to
minimize the potential for interference.
Always keep the phone at least six inches
(15 centimeters) away from your pacemaker
when the phone is turned on.
Do not carry your phone near your heart.
Use the ear opposite the pacemaker.
If you have any reason to suspect that
interference is taking place, turn off your
phone immediately.
Hearing aids—Some digital wireless phones may
interfere with hearing aids. In the event of such
interference, you may want to consult your service
provider or call the customer service line to
discuss alternatives.
Other medical devices—If you use any other
personal medical device, consult the manufacturer
of the device to determine if it is adequately
shielded from external RF energy. Your physician
may be able to help you obtain this information.
In health care facilities—Turn your phone off in
health care facilities when instructed. Hospitals and
health care facilities may be using equipment that is
sensitive to external RF energy.
Potentially unsafe areas
Posted facilities—Turn your phone off in any
facility when posted notices require you to do so.
Aircraft—FCC regulations prohibit using your
phone on a plane that is in the air. Turn your
phone off or switch it to Airplane Mode before
boarding aircraft.
Vehicles—RF signals may affect improperly
installed or inadequately shielded electronic
systems in motor vehicles. Check with the
manufacturer of the device to determine if it is
adequately shielded from external RF energy.
Blasting areas—Turn off your phone where
blasting is in progress. Observe restrictions, and
follow any regulations or rules.
Potentially explosive atmospheres—Turn off your
phone when you are in any area with a potentially
explosive atmosphere. Obey all signs and
instructions. Sparks in such areas could cause an
explosion or fire, resulting in bodily injury or death.
Areas with a potentially explosive atmosphere are
often, but not always, clearly marked.
They include:
fueling areas such as gas stations
below deck on boats
transfer or storage facilities for fuel or
chemicals
vehicles using liquefied petroleum gas, such as
propane or butane
areas where the air contains chemicals or
particles such as grain, dust, or metal powders
any other area where you would normally be
advised to turn off your vehicle engine
Using phone with care
Use only in normal position (to ear). Avoid dropping,
hitting, bending, or sitting on the phone.
Avoiding magnetic environments
Keep the phone away from magnets which can
cause improper functioning of the phone.
Keeping phone dry
Keep the phone dry. Damage can result if the
phone gets wet. Water damage is not covered
under warranty.
Resetting the phone
If the screen seems frozen and the keypad does not
respond to keypresses, reset the phone by
completing the following steps:
1. Remove the battery door.
2. Remove and replace the battery.
Draft
User Guide v
If the problem persists, return the phone to the
dealer for service.
Accessories
Use only Kyocera-approved accessories with
Kyocera phones. Use of any unauthorized
accessories may be dangerous and will invalidate
the phone warranty if said accessories cause
damage or a defect to the phone.
Radio Frequency (RF) energy
Your telephone is a radio transmitter and receiver.
When it is on, it receives and sends out RF energy.
Your service provider’s network controls the power
of the RF signal. This power level can range from
0.006 to 0.6 watts. In August 1996, the U.S. Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) adopted RF
exposure guidelines with safety levels for hand-held
wireless phones. These guidelines are consistent
with the safety standards previously set by both
U.S. and international standards bodies in the
following reports:
ANSI C95.1 (American National Standards
Institute, 1992)
NCRP Report 86 (National Council
on Radiation Protection and
Measurements, 1986)
ICNIRP (International Commission on
Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection, 1996)
Your phone complies with the standards set by
these reports and the FCC guidelines.
E911 mandates
Where service is available, this handset complies
with the Phase I and Phase II E911 Mandates
issued by the FCC.
Hearing Aid Compatibility (HAC)
Some mobile phones and hearing devices (hearing
aids and cochlear implants), when used together,
result in buzzing, humming, or whining noises
detected by the user. Some hearing devices are
more immune than others to this interference noise,
and phones also vary in the amount of interference
they generate.
The wireless telephone industry has developed
ratings for some of their mobile phones, to assist
hearing device users in finding phones that may be
compatible with their hearing devices. Not all
phones have been rated. Phones that are rated
have the rating on their box or a label on the box.
The ratings are not guarantees and 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.
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 choose the proper rating for your
mobile phone. The more immune your hearing aid
is, the less likely you are to experience interference
noise from mobile phones.
For more information about hearing aid
compatibility, visit the FCC's Consumer &
Governmental Affairs Bureau Web site at
www.fcc.gov/cgb/dro.
Draft
vi
Battery and charger specifications
Kyocera Wireless Corp.
www.kyocera-wireless.com
To purchase accessories, visit
www.kyocera-wireless.com/store
Charger Input Ouput
CE90-R2093 100-240 VAC / 50/60 Hz 5V 350mA
CV90-R2672 100-240 VAC / 50/60 Hz 4.5V 1.2A
CV90-R274A 100-240 VAC / 50/60 Hz 4.5V 600mA
Standard Battery (5mm):
CV90-K3880 3.7V / 790 mAh
Draft
Phone User Guide vii
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1 Getting Started. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1
Phone battery. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1
Phone overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2
Main menu. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6
Basic navigation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6
Guide conventions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7
2 Basic Functions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8
Powering up. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8
Making phone calls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8
Answering phone calls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8
Ending phone calls. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9
Verifying your phone number. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9
Activating voice dialing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9
3 Call Features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10
Volume control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10
Hold call . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10
Speed dialing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10
1-Touch dialing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10
Voicemail. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11
Data and fax calls. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11
Roaming calls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11
Emergency services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12
Airplane mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12
4 Text Entry. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13
Text entry modes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13
Text entry quick reference . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14
5 Recent Calls. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16
Call lists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16
Call timers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17
6 Contacts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18
Viewing Contacts list. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18
Adding contacts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18
Working with contacts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19
Contact groups. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .22
Searching contacts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23
Contacts count . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23
7 Media Gallery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24
Accessing folders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24
Browsing images . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Browsing sounds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24
8 Settings. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25
Menu options. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25
Bluetooth® . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
Sounds. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Display. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .29
Convenience . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Accessories . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Voice Features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34
Network. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .38
Phone information. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .39
9 Messaging . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .40
Text messages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .40
Multimedia messages. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41
Erase messages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
Working with messages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44
Message settings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .46
10 Camera . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .49
Taking a picture. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
Camera mode options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .49
Camera indicators and icons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
11 Tools. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51
Voice memo. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51
Scheduler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
Alarm clock. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .53
Tip calculator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54
Calculator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
Timer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .55
Draft
viii
Stopwatch . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
World clock . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
12 Browser . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .56
Launching Browser. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
Using Web menu options. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
Searching for Web site . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
Using bookmark . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
Checking Browser Alerts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
Web Alert . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
13 Downloads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .58
Using Downloads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
Downloading an application . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
Opening an application. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
Viewing application details . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
Removing an application. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
Disabling an application . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
Checking available memory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
14 Voice Commands. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .60
Voice dial list . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
Voice commands. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
15 Getting Help . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62
Customer support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
Qualified service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
Phone accessories. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
Become a product evaluator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
16 Consumer Limited Warranty. . . . . . . . . . 64
Index. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .66
Draft
User Guide 1
1GETTING STARTED
Phone battery
Installing the battery
To install the battery:
With the back of the
phone facing you,
locate the side notches
at the top of the phone.
Slide your fingernail
into one of the notches
to unsnap the back
cover.
Place the battery in the
phone casing with the
metal contacts toward
the top of the phone.
Fit the bottom of the
back cover into the
shape at the bottom of
the battery well.
Press the back cover
until it snaps into place.
To remove the battery, make sure the
phone is turned off.
Charging the battery
You must have at least a partial charge in the
battery to make or receive calls.
To charge the battery:
Connect the AC adapter
to the jack on the
bottom of the phone.
Plug the adapter into a
wall outlet.
The battery icon in the upper-right corner of the
screen shows whether the phone is:
Charging (animated icon)
Partially charged
Fully charged
The battery does not charge if you are
in a call while it is connected to an AC adapter.
Recharging the battery
You can safely recharge the battery at any time,
even if it has a partial charge.
Battery care
General safety guidelines
Do not disassemble or open the battery.
Do not crush, bend, deform, puncture, or
shred the battery.
Do not attempt to insert foreign objects into
the battery.
Do not immerse the battery or expose it to
water or other liquids. Even if a battery
appears to dry out and operate normally,
Draft
2Phone overview
internal parts can slowly corrode and pose a
safety hazard.
Always keep the battery between 15°C and
25°C (59°F and 77°F). Do not expose the
battery to extremes of temperature, fire, or
other hazards such as a cooking surface, iron,
or radiator.
Never use any damaged battery.
Only use the battery for its intended phone.
Only use the battery with a qualified charger.
Use of an unqualified battery charger may
present a risk of fire, explosion, leakage, or
other hazard. If you are unsure about whether
a charger is qualified, contact customer
support.
Do not short-circuit the battery or allow
metallic conductive objects—such as keys,
coins, or jewelry—to contact the
batterys terminals.
Replace the battery only with another qualified
battery. Use of an unqualified battery may
present a risk of fire, explosion, leakage, or
other hazard. If you are unsure about whether
a replacement battery is compatible, contact
customer support.
Promptly dispose of used batteries in
accordance with local regulations and recycle
if possible. Do not dispose as household waste.
Supervise all battery usage by children.
Avoid dropping the phone or battery. If the
phone or battery is dropped, especially on a
hard surface, an internal short-circuit can
occur and pose a safety hazard. If you suspect
battery damage, take it to a service center
for inspection.
Improper battery use may result in fire,
explosion, or other hazard.
Common causes of battery drain
Playing games or using the Web.
Keeping backlighting on.
Operating in digital mode when far away from
a base station or cell site.
Using data cables or accessories.
Operating when no service is available, or
service is available intermittently.
High earpiece and ringer volume settings.
Repeating sound, vibration, or lighted alerts.
Phone overview
Getting to know your phone
The following illustration shows the phone in
open position.
Earpiece speaker.
Home screen.
key scrolls through lists and text
entry fields and accesses shortcuts from the
home screen.
Left softkey accesses menus and functions.
key returns you to the previous screen
and erases characters in text entry.
Draft
User Guide 3
key starts or answers a call. Press once
to display the All calls list and twice to redial
the last number dialed. Press and hold to
activate voice command.
Keypad for entering numbers, letters, or
symbols.
key changes the text mode in text
entry.
key cycles through word choices
during text entry.
key selects a menu item, or accesses the
main menu at the home screen.
Right softkey accesses the contacts list and
other menu options.
key activates the
speakerphone and answers incoming calls.
key turns the phone on and off, ends a
call or browser session, and returns you to
the home screen.
key enters a space during text entry.
Press and hold to activate or deactivate Silent
mode.
Microphone.
Draft
4Phone overview
The following illustration shows the phone in
closed position. With the phone closed, the keys
are locked to prevent accidental key presses.
Jack for hands-free headset only (sold
separately).
Indicator light.
key for raising or lowering speaker
volume.
External screen for displaying time, caller
ID, signal, and battery strength.
Jack for AC adapter (included) and data
cable (sold separately).
key for activating camera mode.
External speaker.
Inserting an accessory into the
incorrect jack damages the phone.
Common keys
The following list the frequently-pressed keys.
Throughout this user guide, these keys are
referred as follows:
Screen icons
These icons may appear on your phone’s screen:
Navigation key
OK key
Left softkey
Right softkey
Send key (also referred to as the Call or Talk
key)
End key (also referred to as the Power key)
Back key
Speakerphone key
The phone is operating in IS95 digital mode.
The phone is operating in IS2000 (1X)
digital mode.
The phone is receiving a signal. You can
make and receive calls. Fewer bars indicate
a weaker signal.
Draft
User Guide 5
A call is in progress.
The phone has a standard speed data
connection.
The phone is not receiving a signal. You
cannot make or receive calls.
Content is DRM protected.
Data service is available and active on your
phone. Check with your service provider for
availability.
(blinking) The phone is sending high-speed
data.
(blinking) The phone is receiving high-
speed data.
Data service is available, but the phone is
dormant.
Bluetooth wireless technology is enabled
(On).
Bluetooth wireless technology is disabled
(Off).
The phone is roaming outside of its home
service area.
New text message.
New voice message.
New voice and text message.
The phone is set to light up instead of ring.
The phone is set to vibrate or to vibrate and
then ring.
The speakerphone is on.
Position location is set to your service
provider and to emergency services.
Position location is set to emergency services
only.
The phone is in camera mode.
Flash on.
The phone is set to auto answer.
The phone is in privacy mode, accessing a
secure Web site or with files locked.
The alarm clock is set.
The battery is fully charged. The more black
bars, the fuller the charge.
The phone is in video mode.
Draft
6Main menu
Main menu
The contents of the main menu are as follows:
Basic navigation
You press your phone keys to access the various
menus and other features of your phone. Some of
the basic frequently-used keys are as follows:
: Selects items that appear on the
lower left of the display. At the home screen,
you can select .
: Selects items that appear on
the lower right of the display. At the home
screen, you can select .
: Selects a menu item.
: Scrolls through menus and
options. You can access the following
shortcuts from the home screen.
Press and hold left to launch Browser.
Press and hold right to record a
voice memo.
Press and hold up to access the
custom menu.
Press and hold down to view recent
calls list.
: Returns to the previous menu level.
Recent Calls
All
Incoming
Outgoing
Missed
Erase Call List
Call Timer
Contacts
View All
Add New
View Groups
Speed Dial List
Voice Dial List
Contacts Count
Media Galley
Images
Sounds
Settings
Bluetooth
Sounds
Display
Convenience
Voice Features
Accessories
Network
Security
Phone Info
Messaging
New Text Msg
New Pic Msg
Voicemail
Inbox
Sent Msgs
Outbox
Saved Msgs
Drafts
Msg Settings
Erase Msg
Camera
Launches the Camera
Tools
Voice Memo
Scheduler
Alarm Clock
Tip Calculator
Calculator
Timer
Stopwatch
World Clock
Browser
Launches the Browser
Downloads
MobileShop
Settings
Help
The menu items on your phone can change depending on the services provided. Check with your service
provider.
Draft
User Guide 7
: Returns to the home screen.
Guide conventions
In this guide the following conventions are used
when describing phone features.
means to press the left or right softkey, or
the key to select an item on the display. For
example, “select ” tells you to physically
press the left softkey to choose from the
display.
means to press a phone key. For example,
“press the key to make a phone call” tells
you to press the key on your phone.
means to press the key to move
though a list on the display. For example, “scroll
through your Contacts list to choose a contact”
means to press the key up or down to
scroll through the list on the display.
The greater than symbol “>” tells you to select an
option from a menu or list. For example,
> ” means to:
At the home screen, press the left softkey to
select .
Scroll to the option.
Press the key to select .
Draft
8Powering up
2BASIC FUNCTIONS
This section explains basic functionality of your
phone. For more detailed explanations of your
phones features, refer to the later chapters.
Powering up
To turn on your phone, press and hold the
key and wait until the phone display lights up.
To turn off your phone, press and hold the
key until the phone turns off.
Making phone calls
Make sure you are in an area where a signal can
be received. Look for the signal strength icon on
the home screen. The more bars you see in this
symbol, the stronger the signal. If there are no
bars, move to where the signal strength is better.
When the phone has been idle for a while with no
signal, it changes to power save mode. When you
see “Power Save” on your phone’s screen, press
any key to return to normal operating mode.
You can make a phone call in one of the
following ways.
Call using numbers
At the home screen:
Enter a phone number.
Press the key.
Call using contacts
At the home screen:
Select to open your Contacts list.
Highlight a contact and press the key.
Call using voice commands
You can use voice commands to call a contact
from your voice dial list or to dial a phone
number. For more information, see “Voice
Commands” on page 60.
Redial a number
At the home screen:
Press the key once to open your call
history.
Highlight a phone number or contact and
press the key.
To redial the last number called, received or
missed, press the key twice.
Answering phone calls
When a call comes in, the phone rings, vibrates,
or lights up. The phone number of the caller also
appears if it is not restricted. If the number is
stored in your Contacts list, the contact’s name
appears.
There are several ways you can answer a phone
call:
Draft
User Guide 9
Answer using earpiece
Press the key or any key with Any Key
Answer enabled. For more information, see “Any
key answer” on page 33.
Answer using speakerphone
Press the key.
Answer using flip
You can set the phone to answer immediately
when you open the flip. This feature does not
apply to incoming data or fax calls. For more
information, see “Open to answer” on page 33.
Ending phone calls
To end a phone call, press the key or close
the flip.
Verifying your phone number
To verify your phone number, select >
> > .
Activating voice dialing
At the home screen:
Press and hold the key.
Follow the prompts.
For more information, see “Voice Commands” on
page 60.
Draft
10 Volume control
3CALL FEATURES
This chapter describes call features such as
volume, holding calls, speed dialing, and other
features.
Volume control
You have several ways to control the volume of
your phone.
Adjust volume during a call
To adjust the earpiece volume during a call, press
the key up or down.
Use the speakerphone
Your phone has a built-in speakerphone. To turn
on the speakerphone, press the
key.
The speakerphone icon appears on the home
screen when the speakerphone is on.
To turn off the speakerphone, press the
key again.
If you press the key during
an incoming call, you will answer the call.
Silence an incoming call
Press the key to silence an incoming call,
especially if you set the phone to answer
immediately when you open the flip. For more
information, see “Open to answer” on page 33.
With the flip open, you can also press the key
or select to silence the phone without
answering the call. To silence the phone and
answer the call, press the key and then press
the key.
In the absence of voicemail, this
feature drops the call.
Hold call
Use this feature to place incoming calls on hold
until you are ready to answer them. See “Hold
call” on page 32.
Speed dialing
Use the Speed Dial feature to assign a one- or two-
digit shortcut to a contact. Before you can use
speed dialing, you must save a phone number as a
contact and assign a speed dial location to it. See
“Contact number” on page 19.
To call a contact that has a speed dial location.
Enter the one- or two-digit speed dial
location.
Press the Send key.
1-Touch dialing
This feature is the fastest way to speed dial a
contact that has a speed dial location. See “1-
Touch dialing” on page 31.
Draft
User Guide 11
Voicemail
Configure your voicemail
Before your phone can receive voicemail
messages, you must set up a password and record
a personal greeting with your service provider.
When you have set up your voicemail, all
unanswered calls to your phone are automatically
transferred to voicemail, even if your phone is in
use or turned off.
Press and hold the key.
Follow the system prompts to create a
password and record a greeting.
Check voicemail
When a voice message is received, your screen
displays a notification along with a voicemail
message icon at the top of your screen. The
symbol flashes if the message is urgent. If you see
a notification:
Select to call your voicemail number.
Follow the system prompts to retrieve the
message.
To clear the screen without checking
messages, select .
If you see only the voicemail message icon:
Select > > .
If you have set up your voicemail, select
to call your voicemail number.
Follow the system prompts to retrieve the
message.
Set voicemail alert
You can set the phone to beep or vibrate every five
minutes to remind you that you have voicemail.
For more information, see “Alerts” on page 46.
Data and fax calls
Your phone may be able to receive certain data or
faxes. See “Data and fax calls” on page 36.
Roaming calls
Control roaming calls
You can restrict your phone from making a call
when roaming. See “Roam option” on page 37.
Set roaming alert
You can set the phone to alert you when you roam
outside of your home service area. See “Roaming
service alert” on page 36.
Set roam ringer
You can set a ringer to indicate when an incoming
call is subject to roaming charges. See “Roam
ringer” on page 28.
Set call guard
You can set the phone to warn you before you
answer or place a call while roaming. See “Roam
call alerton page 37.
Draft
12 Emergency services
Emergency services
Call emergency service
You can call an emergency code, even if your
phone is locked or your account is restricted.
When you call, your phone enters Emergency
mode. This enables the emergency service
exclusive access to your phone to call you back, if
necessary. To make or receive regular calls after
dialing the code, you must exit this mode.
To dial an emergency code:
Enter your 3-digit emergency code.
Press the key.
Regardless of your 3-digit emergency code
(911, 111, 999, 000, etc.), your phone operates
as described.
Exit emergency services
When you have completed the emergency call:
Select .
Select again to confirm your choice.
To determine who has access to your
location, see “Location” on page 37.
Airplane mode
While in an airplane, you can set your phone to
Airplane mode where your phone does not emit
RF signals. See “Airplane mode” on page 31.
Draft
User Guide 13
4TEXT ENTRY
You can enter letters, numbers, and symbols in
contacts, text messages, and your banner.???
Text entry modes
The current text entry mode (and capitalization
setting, when applicable) are indicated by icons.
The text entry screen has the following features:
The number of remaining characters you can
type. Allowed length of messages can vary
depending on your service.
Text entry fields.
Current capitalization setting.
Current text entry mode.
There are six text entry modes:
: quick text mode.
: case change mode.
: normal alpha mode.
: rapid entry mode.
: numbers only mode.
: symbol mode.
The mode you start in depends on the task
you are doing. For example, when entering a
phone number, you are in numbers only mode.
When entering a name for a contact, you are in
normal alpha mode.
Enter numbers
To enter a number while in numbers only
mode, press a number key once.
To enter a number while in normal alpha or
rapid mode, press and hold a number key
until the number appears on the screen.
Enter words letter by letter
Press a key once for the first letter, twice for
the second letter, and so on.
Wait for the cursor to move right and enter
the next letter.
To enter a space, press the key.
Enter words quickly
When you press a series of keys using rapid
mode, your phone checks its dictionary and
guesses at the word you are trying to spell.
For each letter of the word you want, press
the key once. For example, to enter the word
“any” press the > > keys.
Chars: 152
Send To:
Message:
Send Options
Draft
14 Text entry quick reference
If the word doesn’t match what you want,
press the key to check other word
matches.
When you see the word you want, press the
key.
Enter symbols
While entering text in normal alpha mode, you
can enter symbols by pressing the key until you
see the symbol you want. Using this method, you
have access to the following symbols:
To access the full set of symbols:
From the text entry screen, select >
.
Scroll up or down to view the list of symbols.
Press the number key corresponding to the
symbol to enter it.
Change default text entry mode
You can change the default text entry mode when
creating a text message. For more information,
see “Default text” on page 47.
Change modes
Sometimes you need to change modes. For
example, to enter numbers in an email address
while in normal alpha mode, you must change to
numbers only mode, enter the numbers, and then
change back to normal alpha mode to complete
the address.
To change text entry modes, press and hold the
key until the icon for your desired mode
appears at the top of the screen. You can also
select and a different mode.
Capitalization
You can change capitalization at any time while
entering text. Simply press the key to
choose upper or lower case while in normal
alpha mode.
Text entry quick reference
This table gives instructions for entering letters,
numbers, and symbols.
Draft
User Guide 15
Use normal alpha mode and press a key until you see your desired letter.
For more options, see “Text entry modes” on page 13.
Use numbers only mode and press a key. For more options, see “Text
entry modes” on page 13.
In either normal alpha mode, press the key until you find your desired
symbol. For more options, see “Text entry modes” on page 13.
Press the key.
Press the key.
Press and hold the key.
Scroll left or right.
Scroll up or down.
Press and hold the key.
In normal alpha mode, press the key. Choose uppercase.
In normal alpha mode, press the key. Choose lowercase.
In normal alpha mode, press the key. Choose sentence case.
Press the appropriate left or right softkey.
Draft
16 Call lists
5RECENT CALLS
Call lists
Details on the calls you made, received, or missed
are stored in the Recent Calls list and are
identified by the following icons:
View recent calls
Select > and one of the
following:
displays all calls made or received.
displays calls answered.
displays calls made.
displays calls received, but not
answered.
Highlight a recent call.
Press the key to call the number or
select and one of the following:
creates a new contact or
displays the contact details.
sends a text message to
the number.
sends a multimedia
message to the number.
deletes the call from the
call list.
If the phone number is classified as
“secret,” you must enter your four-digit lock code
to access it.
Missed calls
When you have missed a call, “Missed Call”
appears on your screen. You can do one of the
following:
To clear the screen, select .
To view the call details, select and press
the OK key.
To return the call, select and press the
Send key.
Set alert for missed calls
You can set an alert to beep every five minutes
after you have missed a call. See “Alerts” on
page 46.
Erase call list
You can erase your phone’s call lists.
Select > >
> , , , or .
Select .
Outgoing call
Incoming call
Missed call (flashing)
Draft
User Guide 17
Call timers
View call timers
To track the number and duration of calls made
and received on your phone, select >
> and one of the
following:
tracks all calls you have made and
received. You cannot reset this timer.
tracks all calls you have made and
received since you last reset this timer. To
reset this timer to zero, select .
tracks calls you have made and
received in your home service area since you
last reset this timer. To reset this timer to zero,
select .
tracks calls you have made and
received while roaming since you last reset
this timer. To reset this timer to zero, select
.
tracks calls you have received since
you last reset this timer. To reset this timer to
zero, select .
tracks calls you have made since
you last reset this timer. To reset this timer to
zero, select .
Time your calls
Your phone can alert with a short beep ten
seconds before each minute passes during a call.
For more information, see “Minute alerton
page 33.
Draft
18 Viewing Contacts list
6CONTACTS
Use your phone’s Contacts list to store
information about a person or company. Each
contact entry can have up to six phone numbers,
two email addresses, two Web addresses, two
street addresses, and a space for notes.
Viewing Contacts list
To view existing contacts in your phone, select
> > . Your Contacts list is
listed alphabetically.
You can also select from the home
screen to view the directory.
Scroll to a contact and do one of the following:
Press the key to call the highlighted
contact.
Press the key to view the highlighted
contact’s details.
Select to add a new contact.
Select and choose one of the
following:
to make a call.
to send a text message.
sends a multimedia
message.
to view contact details.
to edit contact details.
to erase the contact.
to send contact as a vCard.
to send all contacts via Bluetooth.
to access your contacts.
Adding contacts
Add contact from home screen
To add a contact to your Contacts list:
From the home screen, enter a phone
number to save (including the area code).
Select > .
Enter a name for the contact. For more
information, see “Text Entry” on page 13.
Enter additional phone numbers, email
addresses, Web addresses, and notes, if
needed. Scroll up or down to move through
the contact fields.
When you are done entering the information,
select .
Add contact from contacts menu
To add a contact to your Contacts list:
Select > > .
Enter a name for the contact. When you are
done, scroll down to move to the next field.
For more information, see “Text Entry” on
page 13.
Enter a primary number for the contact.
Draft
User Guide 19
Enter additional phone numbers, email
addresses, Web addresses and note, if
needed. Scroll up or down to move through
the contact fields.
When you are done entering information,
select .
Add code or extension
When you save the phone number of an
automated service, you may include a pause to
stop dialing, where you can wait to dial an
extension.
From the home screen, enter a phone
number.
Select and a type of pause:
causes the phone to stop
dialing for two seconds.
causes the phone to stop
dialing until you select >
while making the call.
Enter the remaining numbers.
Complete the contact and select .
Working with contacts
Contact details
To edit the details of an existing contact:
Select > > .
At the Contacts list, select a contact.
At the contact’s detail screen, select .
Edit or add phone numbers, email
addresses, Web addresses, and notes. Scroll
up or down to move through the contact
fields.
When you are done entering the information,
select .
Contact name
To work on the name of an existing contact:
Select > > .
At the Contacts list, select a contact.
At the contact’s detail screen, scroll to the
contact name.
Select and one of the following:
assigns a specific ringer to the
contact.
assigns a specific picture to the
contact.
deletes the entire contact.
sends the contact as a
vCard.
Contact number
To work on the number of an existing contact:
Select > > .
At the Contacts list, select a contact.
At the contact’s detail screen, scroll to a
contact number.
Select and one of the following:
calls the contact.
Draft
20 Working with contacts
sends a text message.
sends a multimedia
message.
displays the contact’s detail
screen for you to change the number
(adding an area code) or other data of
the contact.
adds the number to your
speed dial list.
displays the number.
deletes the number from
the contact.
/ makes the number
secret, hiding it from the screen until you
enter the lock code.
makes this number the
primary number for the contact.
sends the contact as a
vCard.
adds the number to the
business, personal, or custom group.
Contact email address
To work on the email address of an existing
contact:
Select > > .
At the Contacts list, select a contact.
At the contact’s detail screen, scroll to ‘a
contact email address.
Select and one of the following:
sends a text message.
sends a multimedia
message.
displays the email
address.
adds the email address to
the business, personal, or custom group.
deletes the email address
from the contact.
/ makes the email
address secret, hiding it from the screen
until you enter the lock code.
sends the contact as a
vCard.
Contact Web address
To work on the Web address of an existing
number.
Select > > .
At the Contacts list, select a contact.
At the contact’s detail screen, scroll to a
contact Web address.
Select and one of the following:
launches the Browser and
goes to the Web address.
sends a multimedia
message.
displays the Web address.
Draft
User Guide 21
deletes Web address from the
contact.
/ makes the Web
address secret, hiding it from the screen
until you enter the lock code.
sends the contact as a
vCard.
Contact street address
To work on the street address of an existing
number:
Select > > .
At the Contacts list, select a contact.
At the contact’s detail screen, scroll to a
contact street address.
Select and one of the following:
displays the street
address.
deletes street address
from the contact.
/ makes the street
address secret, hiding it from the screen
until you enter the lock code.
sends the contact as a
vCard.
Contact note
To work on the note of an existing number:
Select > > .
At the Contacts list, select a contact.
At the contact’s detail screen, scroll to the
contact note.
Select and one of the following:
displays the note.
deletes the note from the
contact.
/ makes the note secret,
hiding it from the screen until you enter
the lock code.
sends the contact as a
vCard.
Assign ringer
To assign a ringer to a contact:
Select > > .
At the Contacts list, select a contact.
At the contact’s detail screen, scroll to the
contact name.
Select > >
and a ringer from the list. Scroll to play the
ringers.
Assign picture
To assign a picture to a contact:
Select > > .
At the Contacts list, select a contact.
At the contact’s detail screen, scroll to the
contact name.
Draft
22 Contact groups
Select > and one of the
following:
assigns a picture to the
contact. Select or
> or
to choose what kind of picture to assign.
removes the assigned
picture from the contact.
activates camera
mode.
With Mobile Phone Tools (MPT) for
Kyocera you can transfer digital pictures to your
phone. To purchase MPT or other accessories
visit .
Assign number type
After you assign a number type, an icon appears
in front of the contact number.
Select > > .
At the Contacts list, select a contact.
At the contact’s detail screen, select .
Press down twice to scroll to the number
type dropdown and press the key.
Select , , , ,
or . The appropriate icon appears
next to the number in your phone lists.
Select .
Send a vCard
To send contact information as a message:
Select > > .
At the Contacts list, select a contact.
Select > and one of
the following:
Complete the appropriate task to send the
contact information.
Contact groups
You can assign your contacts to groups. Your
phone comes with two default groups, Business
and Personal. You can also create your own
groups.
Select > > .
Select .
Enter a name for the group, and select .
Select the contacts from the list provided. A
check mark appears next to each selection
you make. You can also remove checkmarks.
After selecting your desired contacts, select
.
Your new group appears the next time you view
your groups.
Draft
User Guide 23
Use groups
Select > > .
At the Groups list, scroll to a group.
Select and one of the following:
displays the group details.
enables editing the group.
deletes the group.
sends a text message.
sends a multimedia
message.
sends the group as
avCard.
Customize groups
Select > > .
At the Groups list, select a group.
Select and one of the following:
assigns a ringer to the group.
assigns a picture to the group.
deletes the group.
enables editing the group.
Searching contacts
To find a phone number or contact, you can
search the Contacts list, check the Frequent List,
or use Fast Find.
Contacts list
To search your Contacts list, select >
and one of the following:
lists the entire Contacts list.
lists the existing groups.
or shows the
contacts on the specified list.
You can also use the shortcut from the
home screen to view the Contacts list. To quickly
get down the list, enter the first letter of the
contact. You can skip to that letter of the alphabet.
Frequent list
With Frequent List enabled, you can see 15 of
your most frequently called contacts. For more
information, see “Frequent list” on page 33.
Fast find
With Fast Find enabled, you can press one or two
keys to view close matches of the number. For
more information, see “Fast find” on page 32.
Contacts count
To check the status of the stored contacts on the
phone (with a maximum of 500), select >
> .
Draft
24 Accessing folders
7MEDIA GALLERY
Your phone stores images and sounds, and
displays those files on the phone’s screen.
Accessing folders
To access the folders where your phone stores
media files, select > and
one of the following:
contains image files that are
preloaded, downloaded, saved or created.
contains sound files that are
preloaded, downloaded, saved or created.
Browsing images
To browse the Images folder:
Select > > and
one of the following:
displays the images
captured with your phone camera.
displays the images
available.
displays the wallpapers
available.
displays the screen savers
available.
displays the pictures you can
assign as caller IDs.
Depending on your selection, you can select
or to complete your desired
task.
Browsing sounds
To browse the Sounds folder:
Select > > and
one of the following:
displays the sounds
available.
displays the ringers available.
contains the voice memos
you have made.
At the folder list, highlight a file.
Depending on your selection, you can select
, , , or to complete
your desired task.???
Draft
User Guide 25
8SETTINGS
Menu options
The contents of the Settings menu are as follows:
Bluetooth
On/Off
My Devices
Settings
Sounds
Ringers
Ringer Mode
Volume
Flip Sounds
Pwr On/Off
Key Sounds
Display
Wallpaper
Screensaver
Main Menu View
My Banner
My Ticker
Backlighting
Brightness
Language
Time/Date Format
Convenience
Airplane Mode
Auto-Hyphen
1-Touch Dialing
Auto Redial
Hold Call
Fast Find
Frequent List
Missed Call Alert
Minute Alert
Open to Answer
Any Key Answer
Voice Features
Automatic Add
Expert Mode
Display Results
Digit Lengths
Voice Answer
Voice Wake-Up
Voice Training
Accessories
Headset Sounds
Auto-Answer
Pwr Backlighting
Com Port Speed
TTY Device
Hearing Aid
Network
Data/Fax Calls
Privacy Alert
Voice Privacy
Roam/Svc Alert
Roam Option
Set Phone Line
Web Alert
Roam Call Alert
Location
Security
Lock Phone
Limit Calls
Emergency Numbers
Erase Contacts
New Lock Code
Phone Info
Build Info
Icon Keys
Some features are not available on all phones. Check with your service provider.
Draft
26 Bluetooth®
Bluetooth®
The Bluetooth® wireless technology on your
phone enables wireless connectivity with
accessories such as portable or installed hands-
free car kits, headsets, handsets, computers,
PC cards and adapters, PDAs, and speakers. You
must use a Bluetooth wireless technology device
(compatible with Class 2 Bluetooth wireless
technology, version 1.2) in order to use this
phone wirelessly. Bluetooth wireless technology
accessories have the symbol. For additional
information on carrier-supported profiles and
third-party accessory compatibility for
Bluetooth wireless technology, visit
www.kyocera-wireless.com/support.
Turning Bluetooth on
You must turn on your phone’s Bluetooth feature
to use it with Bluetooth devices. Select >
> > and one of the
following:
allows other devices to find
your phone.
hides your phone for all devices
except those listed in your My Devices.
prohibits your phone from being used
with any Bluetooth device. To prolong battery
life, it is recommended to set to
when you are not using it.
When you turn on Bluetooth the first time, you are
prompted to do a device search. Then you can
pair with a device.
Pairing
You must first “pair” your phone with the
Bluetooth wireless technology enabled device to
allow your phone to communicate with it. Refer to
the following instructions for setting up Bluetooth
wireless technology in conjunction with the user
guide provided with your Bluetooth device.
Select > > >
> or .
Prepare the Bluetooth device (Bluetooth
accessory) for pairing as described in the
other device’s user guide.
Select > > >
> . Your phone then
searches and detects visible Bluetooth
wireless technology enabled devices in the
vicinity.
With devices found, select to see the list.
Highlight your desired device and select .
When pairing is initiated from another
Bluetooth device, you are prompted to
accept or reject the pairing.
If necessary, enter the password provided in
the Bluetooth device’s user guide and select
.
Draft
User Guide 27
Your phone waits for the device’s response.
With the password accepted, the device
shows in .
Using Bluetooth
Before you can use the Bluetooth wireless
technology functions of your phone, you must get
your phone ready to communicate with a device.
This is called “connecting.”
Connecting to a device
To connect your phone to an audio Bluetooth
device:
Select > > >
.
At the device list, highlight a device and
select .
A notification appears confirming the connection.
You can now use the device with your phone.
Disconnecting from a device
To disconnect your phone from an audio
Bluetooth device:
Select > > >
.
At the device list, highlight a device and
select .
Device list options
You can change or review the information about
each device you paired with your phone.
Select > > >
.
Highlight your desired device.
Select and one of the following:
to rename the device.
to remove the device from your
phone if you are no longer going to use
it.
to view a description of the
device (such as Headset, Handsfree,
Object Push, and Serial Port).
Bluetooth settings
You can set how your phone interacts with
Bluetooth devices. Select > >
> and one of the following:
changes the name of your phone for
other devices it is paired with to identify.
sets the time your phone
remains visible to other devices.
shows the list of the Bluetooth
wireless technology service protocol
supported by your phone.
enables or disables
OBEX authentication.
Draft
28 Sounds
Sounds
Your phone has several settings that control the
sound. You can select from a variety of ringers
and control the volume.
Ringers
You can change the ringer for your phone. You
can also assign ringers for different tasks.
Ringer types
Your phone has multiple ringers you can choose
to use for all incoming calls, incoming business
calls, and incoming personal calls.
Select > > >
> , ,
or .
Select a ringer. (Scroll down the list to hear
the ringers.)
Roam ringer
Your phone can alert you to roaming calls with a
specific ringer. Select > >
> > > .
Ringer mode
Your phone is set to make sounds when you
receive calls, press keys, navigate through menus,
and receive alerts (such as new messages).
You can silence all sounds and set the phone to
vibrate or light up when you receive calls and
alerts.
Select > > >
and one of the following:
rings for the incoming call or
alert (in effect, returning phone to a non-
silent mode).
vibrates for the duration of the
incoming call or other alerts.
vibrates for the first 10
seconds and then rings for the remainder of
the incoming call alert.
lights up for the duration of the
incoming call or other alerts.
You can also press and hold the key (or
the key???) to toggle between Vibrate Only
mode and Normal Sounds mode.
The phone rings when attached to an
external power source (such as a charger), even
if all sounds have been silenced.
Volume
You can control the volume of your phone’s
features.
Volume controls
To control the volume of the phone’s ringer,
speakerphone, earpiece, and keypad:
Select > > >
> ,
, , or .
Scroll right to increase the volume or left to
decrease the volume.
Draft
User Guide 29
Press the key to save.
Smart volume
To automatically adjust the volume during a call,
based on surrounding noise levels, select >
> > >
> .
Flip sounds
To assign specific sounds for when your phone’s
flip opens or closes:
Select > > >
> or .
Select a sound. (Scroll down the list to hear
the sounds.)
Power on/off
Your phone plays a sound when powering on and
off. Select > > >
> .
Key Sound
To choose the sound the phone makes when you
press its keys, select > >
> > , , or .
Display
Wallpaper
You can select a wallpaper for your phones home
screen. Select > > >
and one of the following options:
Scroll to select a wallpaper.
Select > to see the enlarged
picture.
Select > to select an
image from your images folder.
Select > to select a
picture taken with your phone’s camera.
Select > to view the file
details.
Screensaver
Screensavers appear on the home screen,
activated 10 seconds after the last keypress.
Incoming calls and alerts override the
screensavers.Select > >
> and one of the following options:
Scroll to select a screensaver.
Select > to see the enlarged
picture.
Select > to select an
image from your images folder.
Select > to select a
picture taken with your phone’s camera.
Select > to view the file
details.
Draft
30 Display
Main menu view
To display menus in various formats, select
> > >
and one of the following:
displays icons of each menu item, with
its name at the bottom of the screen.
displays a list of each menu item.
The next time you select from the home
screen, you see the menu style you selected.
My banner
The banner is the personal label for your phone,
which appears on the home screen above the time
and date. To change your banner:
Select > > >
.
Select and press the key to clear
the current banner.
Enter your new text (no more than 14
characters) and select .
My ticker
The ticker is the personal label for your phone. To
change your ticker:
Select > > >
.
Select > and press the
key to clear the current ticker.
Enter your new text and select .
Backlighting
Your screen lights up while you are in a call or
when you press a key on the keypad. The
backlight automatically turns off when the phone
is inactive.
Set backlight duration
You can set the length of time that bright
backlighting remains on. Select >
> > >
and one of the following:
turns backlighting off.
, , or
(default) turns backlighting on for a set time
after your last keypress.
, , or
turns backlighting on for the duration of a
call, and for a set time after your last keypress.
The “in call” settings drain the battery
more quickly.
Power save mode
You can activate the power save mode to dim the
backlight and conserve battery life. The power
save mode sets the backlight of the phone to the
lowest level. Select > > >
> > .
Brightness
To change the brightness of the display:
Select > > >
.
Draft
User Guide 31
Scroll to change the brightness.
Press the key to save.
Language
Your phone can display alternative languages.
Select > > >
and a language.
Time and date format
Your phone can display different time/date
formats. Select > > >
and a format.
Convenience
Your phone has several settings that may make
your phone more convenient to use.
Airplane mode
While in an airplane, it is normally required that
you turn off your mobile phone because it emits
RF signals that interfere with air traffic control. In
Airplane mode, however, your phone does not
emit RF signals. You cannot make or receive calls,
send text messages, or use the browser, but you
can play games, use the Scheduler, set the clock,
and make emergency calls to the designated
emergency numbers. Please check with
uniformed personnel before operating your
phone in Airplane mode.
To set your phone to Airplane mode, select
> > >
> > .
If you turn on Airplane mode, you can also set the
time and date manually.
Auto-hyphen
Auto-hyphenation, when enabled, automatically
inserts hyphens into your phone numbers to be
consistent with the U.S. dialing plan, such as
1-222-333-4444. Select > >
> > .
1-Touch dialing
The 1-Touch Dialing feature is the fastest way to
call a speed dial location. To call a contact with
speed dial, press and hold the speed dialing
location.
If it is a two-digit number, press the first
digit briefly, then press and hold the second digit.
For example, if the speed dialing location is 15,
press 1 briefly, then press and hold 5.
To use 1-Touch dialing, you must enable 1-Touch
dialing on your phone and have a speed dial
location assigned to a contact.
To enable 1-touch dialing, select >
> > >
.
Auto redial
Use this setting to select whether to enable your
phone to repeat a call when the called number is
busy or there is no answer. Select >
> > >
or .
Draft
32 Convenience
Hold call
The Hold Call feature enables you to place
incoming calls on hold until you are ready to
answer them.
The Hold Call feature does not work with
the Open to Answer feature enabled. See “Open to
answer” on page 33.
Enable hold call feature
Select > > >
> .
If you have not recorded a hold message, you
need to record one, such as “Please hold. I’ll
answer in a minute.”
Record the message twice, as prompted.
Select to save the message or
and one of the following.
to replay your message.
to record your message
again.
to exit.
The next time a call comes in, you can place it on
hold.
Place a call on hold
You can place a call on hold once you have
enabled this feature.
If you are already on a call and you receive
another call, you cannot place the incoming call
on hold. With no call waiting enabled, the call
goes to voicemail.
When a call comes in, do the following:
Select to place the caller on hold
and play your recorded hold message.
Select to speak to the caller on hold
or to hang up without speaking.
Change the hold message
Select > > >
> .
Record the message twice, as prompted.
Select to save the message or
and one of the following.
to replay your message.
to record your message
again.
to exit.
Fast find
With Fast Find enabled, you can press one or two
keys to view close matches of the number you are
looking for.
From the home screen, press the keys
corresponding to the letters of the name you
want to find. A matching contact or speed
dial entry appears.
Scroll to your desired contact and press the
key to call the number.
To enable Fast Find, select > >
> > .
Draft
User Guide 33
Frequent list
From the home screen, select . The last
15 of your most frequently called contacts appear
with the Frequent List enabled. Scroll past the
double line to view the entire Contacts list.
To enable Frequent List, select >
> > >
.
Missed call alert
Your phone can alert you after you missed a call.
Select > > >
and one of the following:
turns off the sound alert.
, , , , ,
, or sets the phone to alert you
once when a new message is received.
, ,
, ,
, , or
sets the phone to notify you once
when a new message is received and then
notify you again every five minutes. To stop a
reminder alert, select .
Minute alert
Your phone can alert with a short beep ten
seconds before each minute passes during a call.
Select > > >
> .
Open to answer
This feature enables you to answer a call by
opening the flip. Select > >
> > .
Any key answer
To set the phone to answer calls when you press
any key, select > >
> > (to
answer calls with any key except the , ,
or key).
Accessories
This section describes settings that affect
accessories you use with your phone.
Headset sounds
With a headset attached to your phone, you can
play the ringer through the headset or phone
speaker.
Select > > >
and one of the following.
rings from the phone speaker.
rings from the headset.
Auto answer
With a headset or hands-free kit attached to your
phone, you can set the phone to answer
automatically.
Draft
34 Voice Features
Select > > >
> . The phone
automatically answers after 5 seconds.
Power backlighting
You can set backlighting to remain on when using
an external power source, such as the AC adapter,
with the phone.
Power backlighting may not be available
with the optional desktop charger or other
accessories.
Select > > >
and one of the following.
sets power backlighting to normal.
keeps power backlighting with an
accessory.
Use the power backlighting as a night light
when traveling.
Com port speed
The Com Port Speed sets the data rate at which
your phone connects to a laptop or PC. Select
> > >
and a speed.
There may be a higher charge for making calls
using high-speed data in areas where 1X service is
available. Check with your service provider for
details.
TTY device
You can connect the phone to a teletype (TTY)
device for the hearing impaired.
Enable TTY only when using the phone with
a TTY device.
Connect the TTY device to the phone.
Enter with your keypad and select
or select > >
> .
At the notification, select .
Select to connect or to not
connect.
Hearing aid
Enable your phone to operate with a T-coil
Hearing Aid device. Select > >
> > > .
Enable Hearing Aid only when using your
phone with a T-coil Hearing Aid device.
Voice Features
The following features enable you to customize
the voice commands.
Automatic add
By default, your phone automatically enables
voice dialing for each new contact you add to your
Contacts list as long as the contact name contains
at least one alphabet but no more than five words
or components. You can select >
> > >
Draft
User Guide 35
to disable the voice dialing for new
contacts.
Expert mode
The expert mode enables you to speak the
command after you hear a tone instead of
speaking a command following the initial voice
prompts. Select > >
> and one of
the following:
sets phone to default voice prompts.
sets phone to sound tones instead of
voice prompts.
Display results
The display results enables your phone to show
either one voice recognition candidate or up to
three ones. Select > >
> and one of the
following:
presents you only one voice
recognition result.
presents you up to three voice
recognition results.
Digit lengths
Use the digit lengths to determine whether to limit
your dialed numbers to North American numbers
or any numbers. Select > >
> and one of
the following:
recognizes only digit strings
of lengths that correspond to valid North
American dialing numbers of 7-digits,
10-digits, or 1+10-digits to improve accuracy.
allows any digit strings of 4 to 14
digit lengths.
Voice answer
You can use your voice to answer a call when
using a hands-free accessory.
Enable voice answer
Select > > >
> to enable
answering calls with an accessory.
To use the voice answer feature, you must
have the feature disabled (see
Auto answer” on page 33), the
option selected (see “Headset sounds” on
page 33), and the phone set to
(see “Ringer mode” on page 28).
Use voice answer
When you receive an incoming call, the phone
prompts “Incoming call, answer?”. If the caller is
recognized as a contact entry in your phone, the
phone prompts “Incoming call from (Name),
answer?”. Say “Yes” to answer or “No” to silence
the alert without answering.
Draft
36 Network
Voice wake-up
You can activate voice dialing by saying “wake up”
twice. Select > >
> > to
enable calls with an accessory.
To wake up the phone:
Say “Wake Up” and listen for a tone.
Say “Wake Up” again until you hear two tones.
If the phone does not recognize your Wake Up
command, see “Voice training” on page 36.
Voice training
You can train your phone to recognize specifically
your voice for numbers. Use voice training only
when you find your voice not recognized with
acceptable accuracy.
If your phone is having trouble recognizing your
voice, select > >
> > >
. Follow the prompts for each
number until training is complete.
Network
Data and fax calls
Your phone may be able to receive certain data or
faxes, depending on the system sending the
information. You cannot receive voice calls while
the phone is in data/fax mode.
To receive data or faxes, you must connect the
phone to a laptop or PC and switch the phone
from voice mode to data/fax mode.
To purchase a cable, visit
.
To enable data/fax mode, select >
> and of the following:
turns data/fax mode off.
or sets the
phone to data/fax mode for the next incoming
call or the next ten minutes.
or sets the
phone to data/fax mode until the phone is
turned off.
Privacy Alert
You can set your phone to alert you when
enhanced digital CDMA privacy is lost or
regained. Select > > >
> .
Voice privacy
You can also set your phone to use enhanced
digital CDMA privacy. Select > >
> > .
Roaming service alert
Use this setting if you want the phone to alert you
when you roam outside of your home service
area.
Draft
User Guide 37
Select > > >
and one of the following:
turns roaming service alert off.
alerts you with three tones
decreasing in pitch when service is lost and
three tones increasing in pitch when service is
acquired again.
alerts you with two
decreasing tones when roaming service is
acquired and three increasing tones when
home area service is acquired again.
alerts you with three
increasing tones if there is a change in
roaming service or three decreasing tones if
the phone loses service.
Roam option
You can restrict your phone from making a call
when roaming. Select > >
> > (allows
roaming) or (disallows roaming).
Set phone line
Your phone can have two service accounts, or
phone lines, associated with it. Each phone line
has its own phone number. Select >
> > and one
of the two lines.
When you are using one line, you cannot receive
calls from the other. It would be as if the phone
were “off” for that number. Your voicemail,
however, still takes messages. All contacts and
settings are shared for both lines.
You must first establish a second phone
line with your service provider. Once established,
a second phone number becomes available in the
menu for selection.
Web alert
You can set an alert to confirm the start or exit of
the browser. Select > >
> and one of the following:
prompts you when you start a session.
prompts you when you end a session.
prompts you when you start or end a
session.
sets no prompts.
Roam call alert
You can set the phone to warn you before you
answer or place a call while roaming. Select
> > >
> .
The phone emits a distinctive ring to indicate
when you are roaming during a call. To accept or
place a call while roaming, you must press 1.
Call Prompt is disabled when the phone is
in Emergency Mode.
Location
This setting enables you to share your location
information with network services other than
Draft
38 Security
emergency services (for example, 911, 111, 999
and 000) in areas where service has been
implemented.
This feature works only when your phone is in
digital mode. You do have the option of turning off
the locator to emergency services.
Select > > >
and one of the following.
(default) shares your position
information only with emergency services
when you call your 3-digit emergency code.
shares your position
information, in addition to emergency
services.
Security
This section describes all the features involved in
securing your phone and preventing access to
personal information. All security features are
shielded by a four-digit lock code.
Lock phone
When your phone is locked, you can call only
emergency numbers or your service providers
customer service number. You can still receive
incoming calls.
Select > > .
Enter your four-digit lock code.
Select and one of the following:
leaves the phone always unlocked.
locks the phone every time
you turn it on.
locks the phone immediately.
Do the following to unlock the phone:
From the home screen, select .
Enter your four-digit lock code.
Limit calls
You can limit the calls that can be made from your
phone to emergency numbers, your contacts, and
your service provider’s numbers.
Select > > .
Enter your four-digit lock code.
Select and one of the following:
: does not limit calls.
limits outgoing calls
while incoming calls still work.
limits both incoming and
outgoing calls.
Emergency numbers
The emergency numbers feature enables you to
specify three personal phone numbers you can
call when the phone is locked.
Select > > .
Enter your four-digit lock code.
Select .
Select an slot.
Enter the number and select .
Draft
User Guide 39
You can view these numbers only when entering
them for the first time.
To make a call to an emergency number from a
locked phone, you must dial the number
(including area code) exactly as it was stored in
Emergency Numbers.
Erase contacts
You can erase all entries from your Contacts list.
Select > > .
Enter your four-digit lock code.
Select and one of the
following:
exits without erasing contacts.
erases all contacts. A confirmation
prompt appears to verify your decision.
Select to confirm.
New lock code
The lock code is typically 0000 or the last 4 digits
of your phone number. To change your lock code
from the default provided by the service provider:
Select > > .
Enter your four-digit lock code.
Select .
At the confirmation, select .
Enter a new four-digit code.
Re-enter your new lock code.
Phone information
You can access information regarding your
phone. Select > >
and one of the following:
shows specific software and
hardware information.
shows the icons used by your
phone.
Draft
40 Text messages
9MESSAGING
This chapter describes how to send, receive, and
erase messages from your phone. For information
on voicemail messages, see “Voicemail” on
page 11.
The features and menus described in this
chapter may vary depending on services available
in your area. Check with your service provider for
details and possible usage charges.
Text messages
You can only send text messages to phones
capable of receiving them or to email addresses.
Create a text message
Select > > .
At the Send To field, enter a recipient’s phone
number or email address by either:
Select > ,
, or to
access your stored contacts.
Enter a new address manually. See “Text
Entry” on page 13.
You can message up to ten recipients at
once. Use comma or spaces to separate
addresses. If you select stored contacts, this
is done automatically. Scroll down to move to
the next field when done.
At the Message field, enter the message.
Select .
Include QuickText and other extras
During text entry, you can insert prewritten text
(QuickText), symbols, or contacts.
From the text entry screen, select
and one of the following:
inserts prewritten text
from a list.
inserts a symbol. Press the
corresponding number to select a
symbol.
Complete your message.
Select .
Use text message options
When you are ready to send a text message, you
have several options for how and when you want it
received.
After composing your message, select
and one of the following:
saves the message to the
Drafts folder.
saves your composed
message as a prewritten message.
> >
alerts you when a recipient has received
your message.
Draft
User Guide 41
> > or
sets the message priority.
> sets your
callback number. Enter a number and
select .
> > or
specifies the time to send the
message.
> >
sets a defined expiration time limit for a
message.
After selecting options, select .
Complete your message.
Select .
Retrieve a text message
When a text message is received, your phone
displays a notification and the message icon
appears at the top of your screen. The message
icon flashes if the message is urgent. Urgent
messages are also marked in the Inbox.
Message notifications
If you see a message notification, select to
view messages. Scroll to a message and select
to open it.
To clear a message notification, select .
Message icons
If you see the message icon, select >
> . Scroll to a message and
select to open it.
View a text message
The options available when viewing a text message
may vary. Check with your service provider.
Select > > .
Select a message to view. If the message is
long, scroll down to view entire message.
Select to create a response message or
and one of the following:???
deletes the message.
forwards the message.
replies to the message
with a copy of the original attached.
saves the message to the
Saved folder.
saves the message text as
preset text, which can be inserted into
other messages. Graphics are not saved.
protects the message from
accidental deletion.
displays the sender information.
If a graphic is too large or incorrectly
formatted and is not received with the message,
an icon appears.
Multimedia messages
You can only send multimedia messages to
phones that are capable of receiving them or to
email addresses. Multimedia messages have a
predetermined character and file size limit. When
you reach the character and file size limit for a
Draft
42 Multimedia messages
single multimedia message, you must edit the
message to meet the size limitation.
Multimedia messaging is not available on
all phones. Check with your service provider.
Create a multimedia message
Select > > .
At the To, CC (to send a copy of the
message), and BCC (to send a blind copy)
fields, do one of the following to enter the
recipient’s phone number or email address.
Scroll down to move to the next field when
done.
Select > ,
, , or to
access your stored contacts.
Enter the phone number or email
address manually. See “Text Entry” on
page 13.
You can message up to ten recipients
at once. Use a comma or spaces to separate
addresses. (If you select stored contacts,
your phone does this automatically.)
At the Subject field, enter a subject. Scroll
down to move to the next field when done.
At the Message field, enter a message. Scroll
down to move to the next field when done.
At the Image field, select and one of
the following to attach a file:
to instantly take a photo
and attach it.
to attach an existing file
from or .
Scroll down to move to the next field
when done.
At the Sound field, select and one of
the following to attach a file:
to instantly record a
sound and attach it.
to attach an existing file
from , or
.
Select .
Use multimedia message options
When you are ready to send a multimedia
message, you have several options for how and
when you want it received.
While composing your message, select
and one of the following:
adds contacts to your
message.
adds prewritten text to
your message.
plays your message.
saves the message to the
draft folder.
adds additional recipients to
your message.
saves a recipient’s address
to your phone if it is new.
Draft
User Guide 43
sets the various message settings
such as , ,
, and .
After setting options, press the key to
return to the message window if necessary.
Complete your message.
Select .
Retrieve a multimedia message
There are two modes for receiving a multimedia
message on your phone: Auto Retrieve (default)
and Prompt.???
Auto retrieve mode
When a message is received, it is automatically
downloaded onto your phone. A notification
appears when a new message has been
downloaded to your phone. Select one of
the following:
opens the message.
saves the message for you to view later.
If a message is received during a call, the
phone downloads the message approximately one
minute after the last key is pressed.
Prompt mode
When a multimedia message is received, it is
not automatically downloaded onto your phone.
A notification appears when a new message
is available for download. Select one of
the following:
downloads and opens the message.
deletes the message.
sends the message to the
Inbox for you to download and view later.
If a multimedia message is received during
a call, the phone displays a notification after the
call ends.
View a multimedia message
When a multimedia message is received, the
message icon appears at the top of your screen.
The message icon flashes if the message is urgent.
All notifications or messages are stored in the
Inbox regardless of your
settings.???
Select > > .
Select to read a message. If the
message is long, scroll down to view the
entire message.
Select to create a response message or
and one of the following:
enables or disables
silencing the message.
deletes the message.
forwards the message without
showing the original address, graphic,
sound, and text fields.
avoids erasing the message
accidentally.
displays the message
information (priority, sender, subject, time
sent and received, and message size).
Draft
44 Erase messages
plays the message again from
the beginning.
exits the message.
saves the picture embedded
in the message.
saves the sound embedded in
the message.
extracts email addresses,
phone numbers, and/or URLs from the
sender information and message body.
saves the text in the
message to the QuickText list.
calls the message sender.
saves the message to the
Saved Folder.
The options available to you may vary.
Check with your service provider.
Erase messages
It is a good idea to erase old messages to free up
memory in your phone.
You can erase messages as you send or read
them, erasing them one at a time or all at once.
Erase a single message
Select > > ,
, , , or .
Scroll to the message you want to erase.
Select > .
At the notification, select to erase the
message.
You can erase a scheduled message from
the Outbox, but you cannot cancel delivery of the
message.
Erase all messages
Select > > >
, , , ,
or .
To erase messages from all folders, select
.
At the notification,select to erase the
messages.
Working with messages
This setion provides some tips about messaging
with your phone.
Unable to send messages
You may not be able to send or receive messages
if your phones memory is nearly full, or if digital
service is not available at the time. To free up
memory, erase old messages. See “Erase
messages” on page 44.
Appended messages
If you go over the character limit for a single
message, the phone may automatically append an
empty segment to your message to make space.
Draft
User Guide 45
Your service provider charges you
for each message segment.
When you start a message, the maximum
character limit appears once you are in the
message entry field. This number counts down as
you enter characters, until it reaches 0.
If you continue to enter text after this counter
reaches 0, a message segment may be appended.
When you reach the message size limit, you are
prompted to edit the message or alerted that the
message is being appended.
Appended messages may not be available
on all phones. Check with your service provider.
Receive incoming calls while
creating messages
If you receive a call while creating a message you
will receive a notification. You can do the
following:
Select to not answer the call but return
to the message screen.
Press the key to answer the call and save
the message to the Drafts folder.
Complete messages in Drafts folder
To continue composing a message in the Drafts
folder:
Select > > and the
message you want to complete.
Select .
Complete your message.
Select .
View messages in Sent folder
To view messages in the Sent folder, select
> > .
Scroll through the list of messages. One of
the following indicators may appear next to
each message:
View failed or pending messages
Failed or pending messages are stored in your
Outbox folder. To view messages in the Outbox
folder, select > > . Your
list of failed or pending messages appears with the
following symbols.
The scheduled message was sent and
delivered as scheduled. You cannot
cancel delivery of the message.
The message has been received.
The message has never been sent or
has not been sent since it was last
modified. You can cancel delivery of
the message
The message has been sent to more
than one recipient.
The message is pending and will be sent
when possible. You can cancel delivery
of the message.
Draft
46 Message settings
Message settings
Messaging settings help configure your phone’s
text message settings.
Alerts
Choose your alerts for voicemail, pages, or
messages.
Select > > >
> , , or
.
Select an alert.
If you select an alert with an & Remind, the
phone notifies you once when receiving a new
message and notifies you again every five minutes.
To stop a reminder alert, select .
Signature
The signature you create is included at the end of
all outgoing messages, but does not appear in the
message creation screen.
Select > >
> .
Enter your signature in the text field.
Select to save the signature.
The characters in the signature
are included in the total character count of
the message.
Edit Quick Text
Your phone comes with prewritten messages
(preset text), such as “Please call me,” which you
can insert into the body of a text message. You can
edit these messages or create new ones. Your
phone stores up to 40 preset text messages, with
up to 100 characters per message.
Select > > >
and one of the following:???
Scroll to a preset text message and select
.
Select to create a new preset
text message.
Enter or edit the text.
Select .
You can also save a message you have
written or received as preset text.
Auto retrieve
To set your phone to automatically retrieve
multimedia messages, select Select >
> > and
one of the following:
turns off auto retrieve. You are
prompted before any multimedia messages
are download.
turns on auto retrieve.
The message cannot be sent because
service is not available. An alert appears
on your phone if the message cannot
be sent.
Draft
User Guide 47
Hide or show CC/BCC
To show or hide the CC and BCC fields when you
compose a multimedia message, select >
> > or
.
Callback number
Set a callback number to let recipients know
where to call you back.
Select > > >
.
Enter number in the text field.
Select to save the number.
Save to sent
To set your phone to automatically save outgoing
messages to the folder, select >
> > and
one of the following:
does not save the outgoing
messages.
allows you to choose whether to save
your message when you send it.
saves all outgoing messages to the
folder.
Auto-erase
You can set your phone to erase message
automatically when memory is needed for
incoming messages.
Select > > >
and one of the following:
erases no messages.
erases old messages in your
Inbox when memory is needed.
erases old messages in the
folder when memory is needed.
erases old messages in both your Inbox
and Sent folder when memory is needed.
Default text
You can change the default text entry mode when
creating a text message. This setting applies only
to the Message field, not the Send To field.
Select > > >
and one of the following:
to enter text letter by letter.
enter text with word recognition.
Text message receipt
You can request a notification when a recipient
has received your text message. Select >
> >
> .
Picture message receipt
You can request a notification when a recipient
has received your picture message. Select
> > >
> .
Draft
48 Message settings
Voicemail number
Set the number your phone calls to retrieve
voicemail. Often your voicemail number is
automatically programmed by your service
provider.
Select > > >
.
Select .
Enter the voicemail number. Use >
or to enter pauses.
Select .
Multimedia message reply
To set whether to reply to a multimedia message
with a multimedia or text message, select >
> >
> or .
Draft
User Guide 49
10 CAMERA
The following are some tips for you to operate
your phones camera:
You cannot activate the camera while on
an active call or while browsing files in the
media gallery.
Once the camera is active, the home screen
acts as the viewfinder.
If you get a “Low memory” error, check your
resolution and quality compression settings.
If there is no activity within 45 seconds after
you turn your camera on, the camera quits
and returns to the previous launch point.
Menu settings and options can only be
accessed when the camera is active.
Taking a picture
To take a picture:
Activate the camera in one of the
following ways:
Press the key until the camera
screen appears.
Select > .
Focus on the image using the phone’s display
as a viewfinder.
Take a picture in one of the following ways:
Press the key.
Press the key.
Select .
The picture is saved to your Camera
Pictures folder.
Select to create a multimedia
message or to delete the picture
from your phone.
Press the key to exit camera mode.
Camera mode options
You can set up how your camera takes pictures.
While in camera mode, select and one of
the following:
displays the following camera
settings you may set up prior to taking
a picture:
sets the horizontal and vertical
number of pixels for the picture.
sets up a countdown timer to
automatically take a picture when the
timer expires. When set, the camera beeps
from 3 seconds down to the time the
shutter automatically snaps the picture
(unavailable for Multishot mode).
prints the date and time on the
picture (not for resolution).
takes up to six multiple pictures
with the key pressed and held.
A tone plays each time a picture is taken.
Draft
50 Camera indicators and icons
A second tone plays when the final picture
is taken.
sets the sound used when
the camera takes a picture.
adjusts the camera for
different lighting.
sets the color tone of
the picture.
sets the picture
compression. The higher the
compression, the better the detail of the
picture (higher pixel rate). When set to
, the picture file size is larger, using
more memory.
adjusts the brightness of the image
in the home screen LCD.
displays all pictures taken
with your phone’s camera.
displays the most recently
taken picture.
adds a frame or a stamp to your
picture. A frame or stamp cannot be removed
once it has been used in a picture. The picture
resolution changes to while taking
pictures with enabled. The resolution
returns to the original setting with
disabled.
The following settings revert to the default
setting each time you enter and exit the camera
application: and .
Camera indicators and icons
The camera may display the following on screen
indicators and icons.
Numbers in the top right corner indicate
the number of snapshot remaining. Numbers in
the bottom left corner indicate the resolution
setting for pictures.
Flash is on.
Camera is in camera mode.
Multishot feature is on.
Self-timer feature is on
Camera zoom mode is ready.
Draft
User Guide 51
11 TOOLS
Your phone comes with tools and games. Some of
the games or tools described here may not be
available on your phone.
If you receive an incoming call while you are
playing a game, the game is paused and exited.
You can return to play once the call alert ends.
Games do not remain paused if the phone is
turned off or loses power.
Voice memo
The Voice Memo tool enables you to record and
play back audio memos.
Record voice memos
To record new voice memos, do the following:
Select > > >
.
Say your voice memo. Select when you
are done.
Select to save your memo.
If an incoming call is received while you are
recording a memo, the memo is saved and the
incoming call screen appears.
Review voice memos
To play and use voice memos, do the following:
Select > > >
.
At the file list, highlight a file.
Select to play the memo or select
and one of the following:
creates a message with the memo
attached.
deletes the memo.
/ prevents erasing the
memo accidentally.
renames the memo.
displays the details of the file.
deletes all memos stored.
Scheduler
The Scheduler enables you to schedule events and
set reminder alerts.
Create an event
Select > > >
.
At the Event Name field, enter a name. Scroll
down to move to the next field when done.
At the Type field, choose an event. Press the
key and select a choice from the list.
At the Date field, modify the date, if needed.
Press to change the date.
Scroll left or right to move between the
month, day and year fields.
Draft
52 Scheduler
Scroll up or down to change the month,
day and year.
Press the key to save the date and move
to the next field.
At the Time field, modify the time, if needed.
Press to change the time.
Scroll left or right to move between the
hour, minute and AM/PM fields.
Scroll up or down to change hour,
minute and AM/PM.
Press the key to save the time and move
to the next field.
At the Duration field, modify the duration of
event, if needed. Press to change the
duration.
Scroll left or right to move between the
hour and minute fields.
Scroll up or down to change the hour
and minute.
Press the key to save the duration and
move to the next field.
At the Priority field, choose a priority. Press
the key and select a choice from the list.
At the Reminder field, choose a reminder.
Press the key and select a choice from
the list.
At the Reminder Sound field, choose a
reminder sound alerts. Press the key and
select a choice from the list.
At the Silent Mode field, press the key
and select to leave on normal sounds or
to place the phone in silent
mode during the duration of the event.
At the Recurring Event field, make the event
recurring, if needed. Press the key and
select a choice from the list.
Select to save the event.
View events
You can view the events saved to the scheduler.
View by date
Select > > and one
of the following:
displays the current month.
Days with events are highlighted. Scroll
the calendar. Press the key to select a
date.
displays the current date.
Scroll right or left to move to another
date.
chooses a specific date.
Scroll left or right to move between the
month, day and year fields. Scroll up or
down to change month, day and year.
Press to select the date.
At the day view, do one of the following:
Select an existing event to view the event
detail.
Draft
User Guide 53
Scroll to a time and select to
create a new event.
Select > to return
to the current date.
Select > to select a
specific date.
Select > to
delete all event for that date.
View by list
Select > > >
.
At the event list, select one of the following:
Scroll to an event and select to
display the event detail.
Select > to sort
events by time.
Select > to sort
events by type.
Select > to sort
events by priority.
Select > to
delete all events.
Modify an event
You can modify existing events.
From the event detail screen, you can select to
return to the previous screen or and one
the following:
edits the event.
deletes the event.
creates a message containing the event.
creates an event with the existing event
information.
Scheduler settings
You can change the default settings of your
scheduler.
Select > > >
and one the following:
changes the work day.
deletes events automatically.
prioritizes new events.
assigns reminders for new events.
assigns sound alerts for
new event reminders.
sets the phone to silent mode for
new events.
Alarm clock
You can set up to four alerts with your phone’s
three alarm clocks and one quick alarm.
The alert occurs only if the phone is on.
Set the alarm clocks
Select > > .
Scroll to one of the alarms and select .
At the Alarm Time field, modify the time, if
needed. Press to change the time.
Scroll left or right to move between the
hour, minute and AM/PM fields.
Draft
54 Tip calculator
Scroll up or down to change the hour,
minute and AM/PM.
Press the key to save the time and move
to the next field.
At the Alarm Sound field, choose a sound.
Press the key and select a choice from
the list.
At the Recurring field, make the alarm
recurring, if needed. Press the key and
select a choice from the list.
At the Alarm Note field, enter a note. Press
the key.
Select to set the alarm(s).
When the alarm rings, select to turn off the
alarm or to silence the alarm for 10
minutes.
Opening the flip turns off the alarm.
Set the quick alarm
Select > > .
Highlight the quick alarm and select .
At the Time field, select a time option. A
notification shows the quick alarm is on.
When the quick alarm rings, select to turn off
the alarm or to set the quick alarm again.
Tip calculator
The Tip Calculator helps you calculate how much
tip to include with a bill.
Select > > .
Enter the amount of your bill and select
.
Select the percentage amount to tip. The new
bill amount is shown.
Select to return to menu or to
split the bill.
To split the bill enter number of guests and
select . The new bill amount with splits
is shown. Select to return to menu.
Calculator
The Calculator can perform basic mathematical
operations.
Select > > .
Enter the first number.
Select mathematical operation.
Scroll left to multiply.
Scroll right to divide.
Scroll up to add.
Scroll down to subtract.
The chosen operation is highlighted.
Enter the second number. Press the key
to perform the operation. The result is
shown.
Select to return to menu or and
one of the following:
adds displayed result to the value
stored in memory.
displays currently stored value on the
screen.
Draft
User Guide 55
clears value currently stored in
memory.
Timer
The Timer counts down for the specified time,
and beeps when that amount of time has elapsed.
Select > > > .
At the Set Timer, enter the time length.
Scroll left or right to move between the
hours, minutes and seconds fields.
Scroll up or down to change the hours,
minutes and seconds.
If needed, select and one of the
sounds to change the sound.
To work the timer, select the following
options:
begins the countdown.
pauses the countdown.
clears the timer.
When the countdown is complete, select to
silence the alarm.
Stopwatch
The Stopwatch counts time for you.
Select > > .
To work the stopwatch, select the following
options:
begins counting.
pauses counting.
clears the stopwatch.
Press the key to return to the menu.
World clock
The world clock enables you to check times in
cities around the world in relation to your local
time.
Set the world clock
Select > > .
The world clock menu displays your local
date and time on the first line.
Scroll left or right to select a different time
zone, or up and down to view other cities on
the same time zone.
Search the world clock
From the world clock menu, you can search by
city or country.
Select > > >
> or .
Enter the first letter(s) of your desired city or
country.
Select the city or country from the list.
Draft
56 Launching Browser
12 BROWSER
You can use your phone to browse the Internet if
you have obtained phone Internet services from
your service provider and if over-the-air Internet
access is available in your area.
You cannot receive incoming calls while
you are using Browser.
Launching Browser
At the home screen:
Select > .
A message about airtime fees appears every
time you start the browser.
For more information about how airtime is
charged, contact your service provider.
Select to continue.
If this is the first time you have connected to
the Internet, a message informs you that
security is not yet enabled for your
Web Browser.
Select to enable security.
When you are connected, a browser home
page appears. It has a list of bookmarks and
some Web menu options at the bottom of
the screen. The lock icon appears in a
secure session. An underline and an arrow
indicate that there is more text. Scroll down
to view more text. Press the key to
return to the previous screen.
To choose a site, highlight the link and
select .
When you have finished using the Internet,
press the key to exit.
Using Web menu options
The following options may appear during a
Web session.
returns you to the main Browser
window, or home page.
saves the current location as a
bookmark for easy access.
displays a list of your saved
Web sites.
gives you options for changing how
information is displayed.
displays the entire URL.
displays information
about your Browser version.
should not be used unless
you are instructed to do so by your
service provider.
selects a different browser server.
You can use this option if you have more
than one Browser account.
restarts the Browser.
Draft
User Guide 57
Searching for Web site
How you search for a Web site depends on your
service provider. For more information, contact
your service provider.
Using bookmark
At the home screen:
Select > .
Select to accept browser fees.
From your Web home page, select
. A list of bookmarks appears.
Enter the number corresponding to the
bookmark you want and press the key.
Checking Browser Alerts
Alerts received from a Web site are sent to your
Browser Alerts folder. To check them:
Select > > .
This action launches the browser inbox.
Select to accept browser fees.
Select an alert and follow the prompts.
Web Alert
You can set a prompt to confirm the start or exit
of the Browser.
Select > > >
and one of the following:
to set a prompt when you start
a session.
to set a prompt when you end
a session.
to set a prompt when you start or end
a session.
for no prompts.
Draft
58 Using Downloads
13 DOWNLOADS
Your Kyocera phone has the added ability to
download and manage applications through the
menus.
provides you with the full range of
applications and services from the Internet:
Email, games, relevant news, and much more.
For more information about
capabilities and application pricing, contact your
service provider.
Using Downloads
You connect to the server, download applications,
and then manage them as you like. When you
choose an application, you can choose a demo,
various limited use options, or the full version—
all varying in price. If you choose a demo,
notifies you when it has expired. If
you choose a priced version, the amount goes to
your phone bill. The also notifies
you if you’re running out of memory. At that point,
you can either disable an application or remove
it completely.
With applications loaded, you can update to
newer versions as they become available.
Downloading an application
To download an application:
At the home screen, select >
> > .
When connected to the server, a list of
application types appears under the
menu.
Select an application type. A full list of
applications of your selected type appears.
New applications have an arrow on the left.
Long titles scroll left as you
highlight them.
Select an application. A list of usages appears.
One or more usages may be available with the
cost specified for each.
Select a usage. A confirmation
message appears.
Select to confirm. The application is
downloaded to your phone.
Download times vary.
To open the application now, select .
You can also select to return to the
menu, where you see a link to
your new application.
Your connection to the application
server automatically ends after 30 seconds,
unless you connect again to download more
applications. Press the key to
Draft
User Guide 59
end the connection. Closing the flip does not
end your connection.
Opening an application
Downloaded applications are stored under the
menu. Each application comes with
its own unique icon to help you identify it easily.
At the home screen, select >
.
The icon always remains
at the top of this menu. Downloaded
applications are listed after.
Highlight and select the icon for the
application you want to open.
Viewing application details
You can get information about the size of an
application and how many uses it has left before it
runs out.
At the home screen, select >
> > .
Select the application you want details for.
Removing an application
To remove an application:
At the home screen, select >
> > .
Select the application and .
Select to confirm your choice.
If you remove an application, it is removed
completely from your phone. If you want to use it
again, you must pay for it again. If you want to free
up space on your phone, we recommend you
disable the application.
Disabling an application
If you are running out of memory and want to
download more applications without completely
removing those you have paid for, you can simply
disable them. Thus, you can re-download an
application to use it again without paying for
it again.
At the home screen, select >
> > .
Select the application and .
Select to confirm your choice.
The application is still listed in the
menu. The icon looks like an
empty box.
Checking available memory
The amount of available memory depends on the
number of applications you downloaded.
At the home screen, select >
> > . The
amount of memory left shows at the bottom
of the screen.
For more detailed memory information,
select .
Draft
60 Voice dial list
14 VOICE COMMANDS
You can call a contact, dial a phone number,
access menus, or find contact information from
your voice dial list using voice commands.
You cannot use voice recognition to end a
call; you must press the key when the flip is
open.
Voice dial list
To call or find a contact using voice dial, you must
add the contact to your voice dial list. The contact
name must not have more than five words or
components for voice recognition.
Add contacts
To add a contact to your voice dial list:
Select > > .
At the contact list, highlight a contact and
press the key. A check mark appears next
to a name when voice dialing is active. Check
each name you want to use with voice
dialing.
Select .
Remove contacts
To add a contact to your voice dial list:
Select > > .
At the contact list, highlight a check marked
contact and press the key. No check
mark appears next to a name when voice
dialing is inactive. Uncheck each name you
want to remove from voice dialing.
Select .
Voice commands
Start voice commands
Press and hold the key to initiate voice
commands. The phone prompts,
“Say a command”.
Say one of the following commands and
follow the voice prompts.
” calls a contact on
your voice dial list.
” calls by speaking
the digits of the phone number.
” sends you to a
menu item.
” allows you to find a
contact from your voice dial list.
Call a contact name
If you haven’t already done so, add the
person you want to call to the Voice Dial List.
See “Voice dial list” on page 60.
From the home screen, press and hold the
key. The phone prompts, “Say a
command”.
Draft
User Guide 61
Say “Contact” and the name of the person
you want to call.
The phone prompts, “Please repeat” or “Say
a name” if it does not recognize the name. If
the name you spoke matches a contact in the
Voice Dial List, the phone prompts: “Name,
correct?” Say “Yes” to make the call, “No” to
select a similar name, or “Cancel” to cancel
the phone call.
If the phone finds multiple voice tags that
sound like the name you said, the phone lists
the names and asks you to verify which name
to call. Say “Yes” when you hear the correct
name or “No” when you hear an incorrect
one.
Press the key to end the call.
Call a number
From the home screen, press and hold the
key. The phone prompts, “Say a
command”.
Say “Dial number” and then speak the digits
of the number you want to call. If you pause,
the phone prompts you, “Did you say
<number>” or “Say a number” if it does not
recognize the name. Say “Yes” to make the
call or “No” to cancel the phone call.
Press the key to end the call.
Use shortcuts
From the home screen, press and hold the
key. The phone prompts, “Say a
command”.
Say the name of the menu item you want to
access or say “Shortcut” to view a list of
menu items. The phone prompts, “Say one of
the shortcuts”.
Say the name of the menu item you want
to access.
Find contacts
You can use voice commands to find contact
information for contacts in your Voice Dial List.
From the home screen, press and hold the
key. The phone prompts, “Say a
command”.
Say “Find contact”. The phone prompts, “Say
a name”.
The phone prompts, “Please repeat” or “Say
a name” if it does not recognize the name. If
the name you spoke matches a contact in the
Voice Dial List, the phone prompts: “Name,
correct?” Say “Yes” to make the call, “No” to
select a similar name, or “Cancel” to cancel
the search.
Draft
62 Customer support
15 GETTING HELP
Customer support
Your service provider’s customer support
department may be accessible directly from your
phone when you dial a number, such as *611
(check with your service provider). They can
answer questions about your phone, phone bill,
call coverage area, and specific features available
to you, such as call forwarding or voicemail.
For questions about the phone features, refer to
the materials provided with your phone, or visit
.
For additional questions, you may contact the
Kyocera Wireless Corp. Customer Care Center in
any of the following ways:
Web site: .
Email: phone-help@kyocera-wireless.com.
Phone: 1-800-349-4478 (U.S. and Canada) or
1-858-882-1401.
Customer support phone numbers are also
available in the following countries:
Before requesting support, please try to
reproduce and isolate the problem. When you
contact the Customer Care Center, be ready to
provide the following information:
The name of your service provider.
The actual error message or problem you are
experiencing.
The steps you took to reproduce the problem.
The phone’s mobile equipment identifier
(MEID).
To locate the MEID, select >
> > and scroll
down to : for the 11-digit number. If your
phone uses an electronic service number (ESN),
replaces .
Argentina: 0-800-666-0052
Australia: 1-800-507-000
Brazil: 0-800-55-2362
Chile: 800-43-1212
Colombia: 01-800-700-1546
India: Toll fee#: 1-600-121214
Toll#: 0124-284-5000
Mexico: 001-866-650-5103
New Zealand: 0-800-990-100
Panama: 001-800-51-934
Puerto Rico: 1-866-664-6443
Venezuela 0-800-100-2640
Draft
User Guide 63
Qualified service
If the problem with your phone persists, return
the phone with all accessories and packaging to
the dealer for qualified service.
Phone accessories
To shop for phone accessories, visit
. You may also
call us at 800-349-4188 (U.S.A. only) or
858-882-1410.
Become a product evaluator
To participate in the testing and evaluation of
Kyocera Wireless Corp. products, including
cellular or PCS phones, visit
.
Draft
64 Become a product evaluator
16 CONSUMER LIMITED WARRANTY
Kyocera Wireless Corp. (“KYOCERA”) offers you a
limited warranty that the enclosed product or
products (the “Product”) will be free from
defects in material and workmanship for a period
that expires one year from the date of sale of the
Product to you, provided that you are the original
end-user purchaser of the Product and provided
that your purchase was made from an authorized
supplier. Transfer or resale of a Product will
automatically terminate warranty coverage with
respect to that Product. This limited warranty is
not transferable to any third party, including but
not limited to any subsequent purchaser or owner
of the Product.
KYOCERA shall, at its sole and absolute discretion,
either repair or replace a Product (which unit
may use refurbished parts of similar quality and
functionality) if found by KYOCERA to be defective
in material or workmanship, or if KYOCERA
determines that it is unable to repair or replace
such Product, KYOCERA shall refund the purchase
price for such Product, provided that the subject
Product (i) is returned, with transportation
prepaid, to a KYOCERA authorized service center
within the one year warranty period, and (ii) is
accompanied by a proof of purchase in the form
of a bill of sale or receipted invoice which
evidences that the subject Product is within the
one year warranty period (“Proof of Purchase”).
After the one year warranty period, you must pay
all shipping, parts and labor charges.
This limited warranty does not cover and is void
with respect to the following: (i) any Product
which has been improperly installed, repaired,
maintained or modified; (ii) any Product which
has been subjected to misuse (including any
Product used in conjunction with hardware
electrically or mechanically incompatible or used
with accessories not approved by KYOCERA),
abuse, accident, physical damage, abnormal
operation, improper handling, neglect, exposure
to fire, water or excessive moisture or dampness
or extreme changes in climate or temperature;
(iii) any Product operated outside published
maximum ratings; (iv) cosmetic damage; (v) any
Product on which warranty stickers or Product
serial numbers have been removed, altered, or
rendered illegible; (vi) cost of installation,
removal or reinstallation; (vii) signal reception
problems (unless caused by defects in material
and workmanship); (viii) damage the result of
fire, flood, acts of God or other acts which are not
the fault of KYOCERA and which the Product is not
specified to tolerate, including damage caused by
mishandling, shipping and blown fuses; (ix)
consumables (such as fuses); or (x) any Product
which has been opened, repaired, modified or
altered by anyone other than KYOCERA or a
KYOCERA authorized service center.
Draft
User Guide 65
USE ONLY KYOCERA APPROVED ACCESSORIES
WITH KYOCERA PHONES. USE OF ANY
UNAUTHORIZED ACCESSORIES MAY BE
DANGEROUS AND WILL INVALIDATE THE PHONE
WARRANTY IF SAID ACCESSORIES CAUSE
DAMAGE OR A DEFECT TO THE PHONE.
KYOCERA SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIMS LIABILITY
FOR ANY AND ALL DIRECT, INDIRECT, SPECIAL,
GENERAL, PUNITIVE, EXEMPLARY, AGGRAVATED,
INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES,
EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY THEREOF,
WHETHER FORESEEABLE OR UNFORESEEABLE
OF ANY KIND WHATSOEVER, INCLUDING BUT
NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF PROFITS,
UNANTICIPATED BENEFITS OR REVENUE,
ANTICIPATED PROFITS ARISING OUT OF USE OF
OR INABILITY TO USE ANY PRODUCT (FOR
EXAMPLE, WASTED AIRTIME CHARGES DUE TO
THE MALFUNCTION OF A PRODUCT) OR
CONTRIBUTION OR INDEMNITY IN RESPECT OF
ANY CLAIM RELATED TO A PRODUCT.
REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF A DEFECTIVE
PRODUCT OR REFUND OF THE PURCHASE PRICE
RELATING TO A DEFECTIVE PRODUCT, AS
PROVIDED UNDER THIS WARRANTY, ARE YOUR
SOLE AND EXCLUSIVE REMEDIES FOR BREACH
OF THE LIMITED WARRANTY, AND SUBJECT TO
THIS WARRANTY, THE PRODUCTS ARE
APPROVED AND ACCEPTED BY YOU “AS IS”.
KYOCERA MAKES NO OTHER WARRANTIES,
REPRESENTATIONS OR CONDITIONS OF ANY
KIND, ORAL OR VERBAL, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,
STATUTORY OR OTHERWISE, WITH RESPECT TO
THE PRODUCTS, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED
TO ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY OR CONDITION OF
MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR AGAINST
INFRINGEMENT OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY OR
CONDITION ARISING OUT OF TRADE USAGE OR
OUT OF A COURSE OF DEALING OR COURSE OF
PERFORMANCE. NO DEALER, DISTRIBUTOR,
AGENT OR EMPLOYEE IS AUTHORIZED TO MAKE
ANY MODIFICATION OR ADDITION TO THIS
WARRANTY.
Some jurisdictions do not allow the exclusion or
limitation of incidental or consequential damages,
or allow limitations on how long an implied
warranty lasts, so the above limitations or
exclusions may not apply to you. This limited
warranty gives you specific legal rights, and you
may also have other rights which vary from
jurisdiction to jurisdiction.
For warranty service information, please call the
following telephone number from anywhere in the
continental United States and Canada: 1-800-349-
4478 or 858-882-1401.
Please call or write for the location of the Kyocera
Wireless Corp. authorized service center nearest
you and for procedures for obtaining warranty
service.
Draft
66
INDEX
Numerics
1-touch dialing, 31
A
accessories, 63
headsets, 33
settings, 33
T-coil hearing aid, 34
TTY device, 34
adding
contacts, 18
extensions, 19
voice dial list, 60
airplane mode, 31
alarm clock, 53
alert
privacy, 36
web, 57
alerts
browser, 37
messages, 46
minute, 33
missed call, 33
pages, 46
roaming calls, 37
roaming service, 36
vibrating, 28
voicemail, 46
appended messages, 44
auto receive mode
multimedia message, 43
auto redial, 31
auto retrieve, 46
auto save, 47
Auto view, 46
auto-erase, 47
auto-hyphenation, 31
automatic add, 34
Axcess Apps, 58
B
backlighting
power, 34
settings, 30
banner, 30
battery
caring, 1
charging, 1
installing, 1
recharging, 1
Bluetooth, 26
connecting to other devices,
27
pairing, 26
settings, 27
turning on, 26
BREW apps, 58
brightness, 30, 50
browser
alerts, 37
business ringers, 28
C
calculator, 54
calendar, See scheduler
call lists
erasing, 16
viewing, 16
call timers, 17
callback number, 47
text message, 41
callers IDs, 24
calls
call lists, 16
data, 36
emergency, 12
ending, 9
fax, 36
holding, 32
limiting, 38
roaming, 11
silencing, 10
voice commands, 60
camera, 49
color tone, 50
indicators and icons, 50
multiple pictures, 49
options, 49
resolution, 49
self timer, 49
settings, 49
shutter sound, 50
taking picture, 49
white balance, 50
capitalization, 14
changing modes, text entry, 14
color tone, 50
com port speed, 34
contacts, 18
adding, 18
adding to a group, 20
assign number type, 22
assign picture, 19, 21
assign ringer, 19, 21
Draft
Phone User Guide 67
calling numbers, 19
customizing, 19
directory, 18
editing, 18, 19
email addresses, 20
erase, 19
erasing, 20, 39
fast find, 32
frequent list, 33
groups, 22
memory, 23
notes, 21
primary number, 20
searching, 23
secret, 20, 21
send as vCard, 19, 22
sending as a vCard, 18
sending text message, 20
speed dial list, 20
street addresses, 21
viewing all, 18
voice search, 61
web addresses, 20
contacts list, 18
convenience settings, 31
convention
using this guide, 7
countdown timer, 55
creating
groups, 23
customer support, 62
customizing contacts, 19
D
data
calls, 36
default text mode, changing, 47
dialing
1-touch, 31
speed, 10
voice list, 60
digit lengths, 35
directory, contacts, 18
display
backlighting, 30
banner, 30
brightness, 30
language, 31
main menu, 30
screensavers, 29
settings, 29
ticker, 30
time/date format, 31
display results, 35
download, 58
downloading
application, 58
drafts folder, 45
E
earpiece, 9
volume, 28
editing contacts, 19
email addresses, 20
emergency
calls, 12
numbers, 38
entering
letters, 13
numbers, 13
symbols, 14
text, 14
erasing
contacts, 39
multimedia messages, 44
evaluation, product, 63
expert mode, 35
F
faxes, 36
flip
answering calls, 33
folders
draft, 45
images, 24
inbox, 41
multimedia, 24
sent, 45
frame, 50
frequent list, 33
G
games, 51
downloading, 58
groups, 22
assign picture, 23
assign ringer, 23
creating, 23
erase, 23
sending mulitmedia message,
18, 20, 23
sending text message, 23
H
hands-free
auto answer, 33
headsets
auto answer, 33
sounds, 33
help, getting, 62
hold calls, 32
I
icons, 4, 39
Draft
68
text message, 41
images
browsing, 24
saved, 24
incoming calls, 16
indicators and icons
camera, 50
K
key
navigation, 6
keypad
sounds, 29
volume, 28
keys
frequently used, 4
L
language, 31
left softkey, 6
lights only alerts, 28
limiting calls, 38
location information, 37
lock code, 39
lock message
multimedia message, 43
locking
phone, 38
text messages, 41
M
main menu, 6, 30
memory, 59
menu
Web, 56
menus
main, 6
main view, 30
settings, 25
messages
alerts, 46
appended, 44
auto-erase incoming, 47
callback number, 47
completing, 45
default text mode, 47
incoming calls, 45
multimedia message, 41
quicktext, 46
settings, 46
signature, 46
text messages, 40
unable to send, 44
minute alerts, 33
missed call
alert, 33
missed calls, 16
deal with, 16
MobileShop, 58
modes
airplane, 31
ringers, 28
text entry, 13
multimedia, 24
multimedia message
auto receive mode, 43
creating, 42
forwarding, 43
locking, 43
options, 42
prompt mode, 43
retrieving, 43
saving picture, 44
sent, 45
viewing, 43
viewing options, 43
multimedia messages
auto save, 47
CC/BCC fields, 47
reply to setting, 48
multiple, 49
multishot, 49
N
navigation key, 6
network
location information, 37
network settings, 36
notes, contacts, 21
notifications
text messages, 41
O
open to answer, 33
Outbox, 45
outgoing calls, 16
P
pages alerts, 46
pairing, 26
personal ringers, 28
phone
answering calls, 8
codes, 19
extensions, 19
icons, 4
making calls, 8
overview, 2
turning on and off, 8
phone information, 39
phone line
setting, 37
picture
multiple, 49
saving, 44
Draft
Phone User Guide 69
picture messages
request receipt, 47
power
backlighting, 34
on and off sounds, 29
prepend, 20
primary number, 20
priority
text message, 41
privacy alert, 36
prompt mode
multimedia message, 43
Q
quick alarm, 54
quicktext, 46
R
rapid entry, 13
receipt request
picture messages, 47
text messages, 47
recent calls, 16
redial, 31
redialing, 8
replying
multimedia messages, 48
text messages, 41
resolution, 49
restrict roaming, 37
right softkey, 6
ringers, 24, 28
business, 28
mode, 28
personal, 28
roam, 28
silent mode, 28
type, 28
volume, 28
roaming
call alerts, 37
restrict, 37
service alerts, 36
S
scheduler, 51
creating events, 51
modifying events, 53
settings, 53
viewing events, 52
screensavers, 24, 29
searching
contacts list, 23
fast find, 32
voice commands, 61
world clock, 55
security
emergency numbers, 38
erasing contacts, 39
limiting calls, 38
lock code, 39
locking phone, 38
settings, 38
sent folder, 45
setting
alarm clock, 53
quick alarm, 54
world clock, 55
settings
accessories, 33
Bluetooth, 27
convenience, 31
display, 29
menu, 25
messages, 46
network, 36
phone information, 39
scheduler, 53
security, 38
sounds, 28
shutter sound, 50
signature, 46
smart sound, 29
software
build information, 39
software build, 39
sounds
browsing, 24
flip closed, 29
flip open, 29
keypad, 29
ringers, 28
saved, 24
settings, 28
silence all, 28
volume, 28
speakerphone, 9, 10
volume, 28
speed
com port, 34
dialing, 10
stopwatch, 55
support, customer, 62
symbols, 14
T
T-coil hearing aid, 34
teletype, 34
text entry, 13
capitalization, 14
changing modes, 14
current mode, 13
Draft
70
default mode, 47
letters, 13
numbers, 13
quick reference, 14
rapid entry, 13
text messages
creating, 40
erasing, 44
forwarding, 41
icon, 41
locking, 41
notification, 41
options, 40
quicktext, 40
replying, 41
request receipt, 40, 47
retrieving, 41
saving, 40, 41
send later, 41
sender information, 41
set priority, 41
validity period, 41
viewing, 41
ticker, 30
time calls, 33
timer, 55
tip calculator, 54
tools, 51
alarm clock, 53
calculator, 54
scheduler, 51
stopwatch, 55
timer, 55
tip calculator, 54
voice memo, 51
world clock, 55
turning on and off, 8
V
validity period
text message, 41
vibrating call alerts, 28
viewing contacts, 18
voice
dial list, 60
memos, 24
privacy, 36
voice answer, 35
voice commands, 34, 60
calling contacts, 60
calling numbers, 61
find contacts, 61
shortcuts, 61
voice dial list, 60
voice dialing
adding contacts, 60
removing contacts, 60
voice memos, 51
erasing, 51
locking, 51
playing, 51
recording, 51
sending, 51
voice recognition, 60
voice training, 36
voice wake-up, 36
voicemail, 11
alerts, 46
number, 48
volume, 28
adjusting, 10
earpiece, 28
keypad, 28
ringers, 28
smart sound, 29
speakerphone, 28
W
wallpaper, 29
wallpapers, 24
web
addresses, 20
alert, 57
alerts, 37
browser, 56
menu, 56
web apps, downloading, 58
white balance, 50
world clock, 55
searching, 55
Draft
Kyocera Wireless Corp.
www.kyocera-wireless.com
82-K6572-1EN, Rev. 001
Draft

Navigation menu