Motorola Mobility P56MD1 Portable Cellular/ PCS CDMA and 2.5 GHz WiMAX Transceiver with WLAN and Bluetooth User Manual APPLICANT MOTOROLA INC
Motorola Mobility LLC Portable Cellular/ PCS CDMA and 2.5 GHz WiMAX Transceiver with WLAN and Bluetooth APPLICANT MOTOROLA INC
Contents
Exhibit 8 Users Manual 2
View Notifications and Phone Status This list identifies the symbols you’ll see on your phone’s display screen: May 16, 2012 No Service — Your phone is without service. You cannot make or receive any type of call. 11:23 Sprint Clear Notifications Direct Connect In Use — Your phone is active on a Direct Connect call. Mary Morgan Copy Revisions 2:50 PM Jim Somers Meet me outside the... 2:47 PM New email paul.wang6@gmail.com(2) 2:45 PM New voicemail Dial *86 Phone In Use — Your phone is active on a phone call. 2:41 PM Phone Basics At the top of the screen, icons on the left notify you about new messages or events (notifications). Icons on the right tell you about phone status. Flick the bar down to show notification details. Group/Talkgroup In Use — Your phone is active on a Group Connect or Talkgroup call. Bluetooth® In Use — Your phone is using Bluetooth. If this icon is black, your phone is in discoverable mode. If this icon is light gray, a Bluetooth connection is active. Active Phone Line — 1 indicates phone line 1 is ready to make calls; 2 indicates phone line 2 is ready to make calls. Battery Strength — A fuller battery indicates a greater charge. The “lightning” icon (bottom rows) indicates the phone is charging. Call Forward — Your phone is set to forward calls. See “Call Forwarding” on page 66. Signal Strength — More bars next to the antenna indicate a stronger signal. Ringer Off — All sound is turned off on your phone. See “Vibrate All” on page 85. 2A. Phone Basics 15 Speaker Off — Direct Connect sound is set to come through the earpiece rather than through the speaker. Text Message — You have one or more text messages. See “Receiving Messages” on page 56. Speaker On — Direct Connect sound is set to come through the speaker rather than through the earpiece. Email — You have one or more emails. Vibrate — Your phone is set to vibrate and not to ring. Connection — You are connected to a 3G or 4G network. Voicemail — You have one or more voicemails. Data Sync — Your phone is downloading email and synchronizing your calendar with your personal, Exchange accounts. GPS — Your phone’s GPS is active. Airplane Mode — Your phone is set not to receive calls and other transmissions. See “Airplane Mode” on page 88. 16 Missed Call — You have one or more missed calls. TTY — You are ready to use your phone to make calls using a TTY (text telephone) device. See “Telecommunications Relay Service” on page 68. Wi-Fi — Your phone is connected to a wireless network. Hearing Aid — Your phone is set for use with a hearing aid and is active on a phone call. See “Using Your Phone With a Hearing Aid Device” on page 147. Alarm Clock — Your alarm clock is set to ring. 2A. Phone Basics Calendar Event — Notification for an upcoming event on you calendar. Chat — You have an active Google Talk chat. Widgets Your phone has a light that blinks whenever you receive voicemail, email, text message, have an appointment, or your battery is low. A widget is small app on the home screen that displays information, such as weather, news, and social networking updates. You can add a widget, such as a clock, music player, or a calendar that shows upcoming appointments. To open a widget, touch it. Creating Widgets App Menu 1. Find an empty spot on your home screen where you want to add a widget. You can flick left or right to open other panels on your home screen. You can find all of your apps in one place. From the home screen, touch the app tab, to open the app menu. 2. Touch and hold the empty spot until you see the Add to Home screen menu. To close the app menu, press Home X or Back %. 3. Touch Motorola widgets or Android widgets. 4. Touch the type of widget. If necessary, enter the widget settings. Recent Apps In the home screen, touch and hold Home X to see the most recent apps you used. Touch an app to open it, or touch Home X to return to the home screen. Tip: You can change a widget’s size. Just touch and hold the SCREEN NOT YET AVAILABLE widget. When the widget’s outline turns white, drag one of the corners to make it the size you want. Note: If you install apps from Android Market™ that have widgets, touch and hold the home screen, and then select a widget to add to the home screen. 2A. Phone Basics 17 Phone Basics Notification Light Setting Up Widgets You can customize some widgets. Touch a widget to open it, and then touch You may already have several useful widgets on your home screen: 䢇 Messages: Change the widget name or choose how long it shows new messages. To add email accounts, see “Setting Up Messaging” on page 53. 䢇 Music: Set this widget to an artist, album, song, playlist, or just touch > Party shuffle. There’s more about “Music” on page 61. 䢇 News: Change the widget name, choose how long it shows new stories, or choose a news source. To choose a source, touch , and then choose preset Bundles or Channels, or choose Custom to enter a URL for a Webpage or an RSS feed. 䢇 Weather: Change temperature units or add locations. To add locations, touch , enter a city, and touch Search. When you open the weather widget, flick left to see other locations you added. 18 2A. Phone Basics Viewing Your Phone Number 䊳 Touch > Settings > About phone > Status. (Your phone number and other information about your phone and account appear.) Entering Text Touchscreen Keyboards Touch a text field to open a touchscreen keyboard. Press Back % to close it. To move the cursor, touch and hold a word. This opens a magnifier where you can drag the cursor. General Tips Use the Android™ keyboard to enter letters one at a time. 11:35 Dinner at Bistro V Next ?123 Shift Microphone Touch for voice input. Delete Return/ New Line Space Letters/Numbers Touch to open a keypad for symbols or numbers. Note: To set your screen to rotate when you turn the phone, touch Orientation. Settings > Sound & display > To… Enter symbols chosen from a list Press Symbols d. Enter alternate characters in the corners of keys Press Alternate c. Enter several alternate characters until you press Alternate c again. Press Alternate c twice. Enter one capital letter Press Shift Enter only capital letters until you press Shift again Press Shift Delete a character (hold to Press Delete Phone Basics Android keyboard twice. delete more) Start a new line (email or text messaging) Press Return g. Select text, Cut, Copy, or Paste Touch and hold a blank spot in a text entry area. 2A. Phone Basics 19 Text Entry Settings Touch Settings > Language & keyboard. 䢇 To change your Swype settings, touch Swype. 䢇 To change the language and the style for your touchscreen keyboard, touch Select locale. 䢇 To edit your word suggestion dictionary for the Android keyboard, touch User dictionary. 䢇 To change your Android keyboard settings, touch Android keyboard. 䢇 To show the touchscreen keyboard when holding your phone vertically, touch Show soft keypad in portrait. 䢇 To change the device keyboard settings touch, Device Keyboard. 20 2A. Phone Basics Tips and Tricks General Tips To… Return to the Press Home X. home screen See recently dialed numbers Press Talk `. Sleep/wake Press Power/Screen Lock. your phone Set screen timeout Touch Settings > Sound & display > Screen timeout. Turn sound on or off Press and hold Power/ Screen Lock > Silent mode. Search Press Search Show last few apps used Press and hold Home X. 䢇 To… Settings > Wireless & networks > Wi-Fi. Power/ Press and hold Screen Lock > Airplane mode. Battery Tips Your phone is like a small computer, giving you a lot of information and apps, with a touch display. Depending on what you use, that can take a lot of power. To save battery life between charges, you could reduce: 䢇 Recording or watching videos, listening to music, or taking pictures. 䢇 Widgets that stream information to your home screen, like news or weather (“Home Screen” on page 13). 䢇 Email updates: Touch Email > Menu / > Account Settings > Email check frequency > Every hour or Never to check for email manually. 䢇 Turn off Bluetooth power: touch Settings > Wireless & networks > Bluetooth. 䢇 䢇 䢇 Google app updates: Touch Settings > Accounts & sync > Cellular data sync > Manual. Display brightness: Touch Settings > Sound & display > Brightness > (dimmer setting). Display timeout delay: Touch Settings > Sound & display > Screen timeout > (shorter setting). 2A. Phone Basics 21 Phone Basics Turn airplane mode on/off Turn off Wi-Fi: touch Making and Answering Calls 11:35 Making Calls 䊳 Connected From the home screen, touch Dialer Recent In-Call Options Contacts 00:12 Verizon Wireless Call Timer Kristine Kelley Dialer. Mobile (555) 555-7931 Chicago, IL Favorites Most Recent Julie Smith Mobile 1-555-555-5555 Return Call GHI PQRS ABC JKL TUV Dialpad Touch to enter numbers during a call. DEF MNO WXYZ Add call End call Dialpad Bluetooth Mute Speaker Add To Contacts Call Enter a phone number & touch here to call it. Voice Call 22 End Call Touch to hang up. Backspace Touch to delete digits you entered. 1 hour ago 2A. Phone Basics Mute Touch to mute or unmute the call. Speaker Touch to turn the speaker on or off. Note: Using a mobile device or accessory while driving may cause distraction and may be illegal. Always obey the laws and drive safely. If the incoming call is from one of your Contacts, the person’s name is displayed. You may also see the caller’s phone number, if available. Ending a Call 䊳 Note: Screen protectors can interfere with touchscreen performance. Aftermarket screen protectors must have an opening for the proximity sensor to operate properly. You may experience abnormal function if an aftermarket-protector or protective film covers proximity sensor area at the top of the phone. Your phone includes a proximity sensor. When you hold the phone to your ear, the display goes dark to prevent accidental touches. When you move your phone away from your ear, the display lights up again. Tip: You can touch To reopen it, touch progress. or to leave the active call display. > Return to call in Answering Calls 䊳 To answer a call while the display is active, touch Answer . When the display is not active, answer by dragging to the right. To end a call, touch End Call. Tip: To ignore a call, touch Ignore. Phone Basics During a call: ® 䢇 To use a Bluetooth device, touch Bluetooth. (First, turn on your phone and pair it. See “Connecting New Devices” on page 46.) 䢇 To mute a call, touch Mute. 䢇 To use the speakerphone, touch Speaker. Missed Phone Calls Missed phone calls are forwarded to voicemail. When you do not answer an incoming call, you will see a Missed Call notification. To display a Missed Call entry from the notification bar: 䊳 Drag the notification bar down and touch the missed call notification. 2A. Phone Basics 23 To display a Missed Call entry from the home screen: 1. Touch Dialer > Call Log. 2. Touch an entry. Recent Calls 䊳 To see recent or missed calls, touch Dialer > Recent To call a number, touch . To send a text message, touch and hold an entry., and then select Send text message. 䡲 To clear the list, touch > Clear list. 䡲 䡲 Emergency Calls Your phone supports emergency calling. Emergency phone calls can be made even when your SIM card is blocked or not in your phone. 䊳 24 Touch Dialer, enter 911 and touch to be connected to an emergency response center. If you are on an active call, you must end it before calling 911. If your phone is locked, touch the Emergency call button at the bottom of the screen. 2A. Phone Basics When you make an emergency call, your phone’s GPS Enabled feature can help emergency service personnel find you, if you are in a location where your phone's GPS antenna has established a clear view of the open sky and your local emergency response center has the equipment to process location information. See “GPS and AGPS” on page 155. Because of the limitations of this feature, always provide your best knowledge of your location to the emergency response center when you make an emergency call. Note: Your service provider programs one or more emergency phone numbers that you can call under any circumstances, even when your phone is locked. Emergency numbers vary by country. Your preprogrammed emergency number(s) may not work in all locations, and sometimes an emergency call cannot be placed due to network, environmental, or interference issues. Important: Always report your location to the 911 operator when placing an emergency call. Some designated emergency call takers, known as Public Safety Answering Points (PSAPs) may not be equipped to receive GPS location information from your phone. Phone Basics Note: Your phone can use location based services (GPS and AGPS) to help emergency services find you. See “GPS and AGPS” in your legal and safety information. Battery Cool Down In very limited circumstances, such as where your phone has been exposed to extreme heat, you may see “Cool Down” messages. To avoid possible damage to your battery and phone, you should follow these instructions until the phone is within its recommended temperature range. When your phone is in “Cool Down” mode, only emergency calls can be made. 2A. Phone Basics 25
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