Motorola Mobility T56JR1 Cellular/ PCS GSM/ WCDMA Transceiver with Bluetooth User Manual V9 3G ASIAEMEA UG 070507
Motorola Mobility LLC Cellular/ PCS GSM/ WCDMA Transceiver with Bluetooth V9 3G ASIAEMEA UG 070507
Exhibit 8 Users Manual
INSTRUCTION MANUAL
A preliminary draft of the User’s Manual follows this page.
The text on the following three pages will be added to the user manual.
APPLICANT: MOTOROLA,INC.
FCC ID: IHDT56JR1
EXHIBIT 8
SAR Data
Specific Absorption Rate Data
SAR Da ta
This model wireless 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 not to exceed limits for exposure to
radio frequency (RF) energy set by the Federal Communications
Commission (FCC) of the U.S. Government and by the Canadian
regulatory authorities. These limits are part of comprehensive
guidelines and establish permitted levels of RF energy for the
general population. The guidelines are based on standards that
were developed by independent scientific organizations through
periodic and thorough evaluation of scientific studies. The
standards include a substantial safety margin designed to assure
the safety of all persons, regardless of age or 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 and by the Canadian regulatory
authorities is 1.6 W/kg.
1
Tests for SAR are conducted using
standard operating positions accepted by the FCC and by Industry
Canada 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, the lower the power output.
Before a phone model is available for sale to the public in the U.S.
and Canada, it must be tested and certified to the FCC and Industry
Canada that it does not exceed the limit established by each
government for safe exposure. The tests are performed in
positions and locations (e.g., at the ear and worn on the body)
reported to the FCC and available for review by Industry Canada.
The highest SAR value for this model phone when tested for use at
the ear is 0.61 W/kg, and when worn on the body, as described in
this user guide, is 0.79W/kg.2
While there may be differences between the SAR levels of various
phones and at various positions, they all meet the governmental
requirements for safe exposure. Please note that improvements to
this product model could cause differences in the SAR value for
later products; in all cases, products are designed to be within the
guidelines.
SAR Data
Additional information on Specific Absorption Rates (SAR) can be
found on the Cellular Telecommunications & Internet Association
(CTIA) Web site:
http://www.phonefacts.net
or the Canadian Wireless Telecommunications Association (CWTA)
Web site:
http://www.cwta.ca
1. 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.
2. The SAR information includes the Motorola testing protocol,
assessment procedure, and measurement uncertainty range for this
product.
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MOTORAZR2V9 3G EMEA
User’s Guide 7/5/07
1
HELLOMOTO
Introducing your new MOTO
RAZR
2
V9 3G wireless phone. Here’s a quick anatomy lesson.
Navigate menus.
Open menus, select menu items.
Clear/Back Key
Press and hold to change ring to vibrate
and back.
Open the camera (press when the phone
is open, hold when the phone is closed).
Microphone
Turn on/off, hang up, exit menus.
Right Soft Key
Left Soft Key
Volume Keys
Smart Key
Press to dial & answer calls.
Hold to use voice dial.
Press and hold to call voicemail.
Make a video call.
Go online.
2
Accessory Connector Port
Insert battery charger
& phone accessories.
Volume Keys
Open ring style menu or adjust camera
zoom when flip is closed.
Battery Charging Indicator
Smart Key
Scroll through ring style menu. Hold the
smart key to lock or unlock all side keys.
Camera Lens
Camera Key
Bluetooth
®
Connection Indicator
External Display
When music is playing, you can see the
music player and control it with the
Smart Key and Volume Keys.
See recent calls. Play music.
After you press the
)g
or
R
keys on the external display, use the volume keys to scroll to menu items, and use
the smart key to go back or exit.
Check messages.
3
To change your home screen shortcuts and your main menu appearance, see your Quick Start Guide.
For more information: See your Quick Start Guide or visit
www.hellomoto.com/support
.
Home Screen Main Menu
Press the Navigation Key
up, down, left, or right
(
S
) to highlight a menu
feature.
3
Press the
Center Key (
s
)
to
select it.
4
Options Main Menu Select Back
Messages
Press and hold the
Power Key
O
for a few
seconds or until the
display lights up to turn
on your phone.
1
Press the
Center Key (
s
) to open
the
Main Menu
.
2
Service Provider
12:00pm
4
Motorola, Inc.
Consumer Advocacy Office
1307 East Algonquin Road
Schaumburg, IL 60196
www.hellomoto.com
1-800-331-6456 (United States)
1-888-390-6456 (TTY/TDD United States for hearing impaired)
1-800-461-4575 (Canada)
Certain mobile phone features are dependent on the capabilities
and settings of your service provider’s network. Additionally,
certain features may not be activated by your service provider,
and/or the provider’s network settings may limit the feature’s
functionality. Always contact your service provider about feature
availability and functionality. All features, functionality, and other
product specifications, as well as the information contained in this
user’s guide are based upon the latest available information and
are believed to be accurate at the time of printing. Motorola
reserves the right to change or modify any information or
specifications without notice or obligation.
MOTOROLA and the Stylized M Logo are registered in the US
Patent & Trademark Office. All other product or service names are
the property of their respective owners. The Bluetooth trademarks
are owned by their proprietor and used by Motorola, Inc. under
license. Java and all other Java-based marks are trademarks or
registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the U.S. and
other countries. Microsoft, Windows and Windows Me are
registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation; and Windows XP
is a trademark of Microsoft Corporation. is a Certification
Mark of the Wireless Fidelity Alliance, Inc.
© Motorola, Inc. 2007.
Caution:
Changes or modifications made in the radio phone, not
expressly approved by Motorola, will void the user’s authority to
operate the equipment.
Software Copyright Notice
The Motorola products described in this manual may include
copyrighted Motorola and third-party software stored in
semiconductor memories or other media. Laws in the United
States and other countries preserve for Motorola 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 Motorola products may not be modified,
reverse-engineered, distributed, or reproduced in any manner to
the extent allowed by law. Furthermore, the purchase of the
Motorola 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 Motorola 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.
Bluetooth ID: (number goes here)
Manual Number: ___
contents
5
contents
Safety Information . . . . . . . . . . 7
FCC Notice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Use and Care . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Recycling Information . . . . . . 13
tips & tricks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
basics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
about this guide. . . . . . . . . . 16
display . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
text entry. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
volume . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
navigation key . . . . . . . . . . . 24
smart key. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
voice commands . . . . . . . . . 25
external display . . . . . . . . . . 27
handsfree speaker. . . . . . . . 27
codes & passwords. . . . . . . 28
lock & unlock phone . . . . . . 28
personalize . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
time & date . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
themes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
display appearance . . . . . . . 30
answer options . . . . . . . . . . 30
phone updates. . . . . . . . . . . 31
calls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
turn off a call alert . . . . . . . . 32
recent calls . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
redial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
caller ID . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
emergency calls. . . . . . . . . . 34
voicemail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
video calls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
connections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
Bluetooth® wireless . . . . . . 37
cable connections . . . . . . . . 42
memory card . . . . . . . . . . . 44
e-mail & messages . . . . . . . . 46
text messages . . . . . . . . . . 46
blogs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
other features . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
advanced calling. . . . . . . . . 50
phonebook . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
messages . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
personalizing . . . . . . . . . . . 61
call times & costs. . . . . . . . 63
handsfree. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
data calls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
network . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66
personal organizer . . . . . . . 67
security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
fun & games . . . . . . . . . . . 71
Safety Information
7
Safety and General Information
Safety I nformation
This section contains important information on the safe and
efficient operation of your mobile device. Read this
information before using your mobile device.
*
Exposure to Radio Frequency (RF)
Energy
Your mobile device contains a transmitter and receiver. When it is
ON, it receives and transmits RF energy. When you communicate
with your mobile device, the system handling your call controls the
power level at which your mobile device transmits.
Your Motorola mobile device is designed to comply with local
regulatory requirements in your country concerning exposure of
human beings to RF energy.
Operational Precautions
For optimal mobile device performance and to be sure that human
exposure to RF energy does not exceed the guidelines set forth in
the relevant standards, always follow these instructions and
precautions.
External Antenna Care
If your mobile device has an external antenna, use only a
Motorola-supplied or approved replacement antenna. Use of
unauthorized antennas, modifications, or attachments could
damage the mobile device and/or may result in your device not
complying with local regulatory requirements in your country.
DO NOT hold the external antenna when the mobile device is IN
USE. Holding the external antenna affects call quality and may
cause the mobile device to operate at a higher power level than
needed.
Product Operation
When placing or receiving a phone call, hold your mobile device
just like you would a landline phone.
If you wear the mobile device on your body, always place the
mobile device in a Motorola-supplied or approved clip, holder,
holster, case, or body harness. If you do not use a body-worn
accessory supplied or approved by Motorola—or if you hang your
mobile device from a lanyard around your neck—keep the mobile
* The information provided in this document supersedes the general
safety information in user’s guides published prior to May 1, 2007.
8
Safety Information
device and its antenna at least 2.5 centimeters (1 inch) from your
body when transmitting.
When using any data feature of the mobile device, with or without
an accessory cable, position the mobile device and its antenna at
least 2.5 centimeters (1 inch) from your body.
Using accessories not supplied or approved by Motorola may
cause your mobile device to exceed RF energy exposure
guidelines. For a list of Motorola-supplied or approved
accessories, visit our Web site at:
www.motorola.com
.
RF Energy Interference/Compatibility
Nearly every electronic device is subject to RF energy interference
from external sources if inadequately shielded, designed, or
otherwise configured for RF energy compatibility. In some
circumstances your mobile device may cause interference with
other devices.
Follow Instructions to Avoid Interference
Problems
Turn off your mobile device in any location where posted notices
instruct you to do so.
In an aircraft, turn off your mobile device whenever instructed to
do so by airline staff. If your mobile device offers an airplane mode
or similar feature, consult airline staff about using it in flight.
Implantable Medical Devices
If you have an implantable medical device, such as a pacemaker or
defibrillator, consult your physician before using this mobile
device.
Persons with implantable medical devices should observe the
following precautions:
•
ALWAYS keep the mobile device more than
20 centimeters (8 inches) from the implantable medical
device when the mobile device is turned ON.
•
DO NOT carry the mobile device in the breast pocket.
•
Use the ear opposite the implantable medical device to
minimize the potential for interference.
•
Turn OFF the mobile device immediately if you have any
reason to suspect that interference is taking place.
Read and follow the directions from the manufacturer of your
implantable medical device. If you have any questions about using
your mobile device with your implantable medical device, consult
your health care provider.
Driving Precautions
Check the laws and regulations on the use of mobile devices in the
area where you drive. Always obey them.
When using your mobile device while driving, please:
Safety Information
9
•
Give full attention to driving and to the road. Using a
mobile device may be distracting. Discontinue use if you
can’t concentrate on driving.
•
Use handsfree operation, if available.
•
Pull off the road and park before making or answering a
call if driving conditions so require.
•
Do not place a mobile device in the airbag deployment
area.
Responsible driving practices can be found in the “Smart Practices
While Driving” section in this user’s guide and/or at the Motorola
Web site:
www.motorola.com/callsmart
.
Note:
The use of wireless phones while driving may cause
distraction. Discontinue a call if you can’t concentrate on driving.
Additionally, the use of wireless devices and their accessories may
be prohibited or restricted in certain areas. Always obey the laws
and regulations on the use of these products.
Operational Warnings
Obey all posted signs when using mobile devices in public areas.
Potentially Explosive Atmospheres
Areas with potentially explosive atmospheres are often but not
always posted and can include fueling areas such as below decks
on boats, fuel or chemical transfer or storage facilities, or areas
where the air contains chemicals or particles, such as grain dust,
or metal powders.
When you are in such an area, turn off your mobile device, and do
not remove, install, or charge batteries. In such areas, sparks can
occur and cause an explosion or fire.
Symbol Key
Your battery, charger, or mobile device may contain symbols,
defined as follows:
Symbol Definition
Important safety information follows.
Do not dispose of your battery or mobile
device in a fire.
Your battery or mobile device may require
recycling in accordance with local laws.
Contact your local regulatory authorities
for more information.
Do not throw your battery or mobile device
in the trash.
Your mobile device contains an internal
lithium ion battery.
Do not let your battery, charger, or mobile
device get wet.
032374o
032376o
032375o
032378o
Li Ion BATT
10
Safety Information
Batteries and Chargers
Caution: Improper treatment or use of batteries may present
a danger of fire, explosion, leakage, or other hazard. For
more information, see the “Battery Use & Battery Safety”
section in this user’s guide.
Choking Hazards
Your mobile device or its accessories may include detachable
parts, which may present a choking hazard to small children. Keep
your mobile device and its accessories away from small children.
Glass Parts
Some parts of your mobile device may be made of glass. This glass
could break if the product is dropped on a hard surface or receives
a substantial impact. If glass breaks, do not touch or attempt to
remove. Stop using your mobile device until the glass is replaced
by a qualified service center.
Seizures/Blackouts
Some people may be susceptible to epileptic seizures or blackouts
when exposed to flashing lights, such as when playing video
games. These may occur even if a person has never had a previous
seizure or blackout.
If you have experienced seizures or blackouts, or if you have a
family history of such occurrences, please consult with your
physician before playing video games or enabling a flashing-lights
feature (if available) on your mobile device.
Discontinue use and consult a physician if any of the following
symptoms occur: convulsion, eye or muscle twitching, loss of
awareness, involuntary movements, or disorientation. It is always
a good idea to hold the screen away from your eyes, leave the
lights on in the room, take a 15-minute break every hour, and stop
use if you are very tired.
Caution About High Volume Usage
Listening at full volume to music or voice through a
headset may damage your hearing.
Repetitive Motion
When you repetitively perform actions such as pressing keys or
entering finger-written characters, you may experience occasional
Listening at full volume to music or voice
through a headset may damage your
hearing.
Symbol Definition
FCC Notice
11
discomfort in your hands, arms, shoulders, neck, or other parts of
your body. If you continue to have discomfort during or after such
use, stop use and see a physician.
FCC Notice to Users
FCC Notice
The following statement applies to all products that have
received FCC approval. Applicable products bear the FCC
logo, and/or an FCC ID in the format FCC-ID:xxxxxx on the
product label.
Motorola has not approved any changes or modifications to this
device by the user. Any changes or modifications could void the
user’s authority to operate the equipment. See 47 CFR Sec. 15.21.
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. See 47 CFR Sec. 15.19(3).
This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the
limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to part 15 of the FCC
Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection
against harmful interference in a residential installation. This
equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio frequency energy
and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions,
may cause harmful interference to radio communications.
However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a
particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful
interference to radio or television reception, which can be
determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is
encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the
following measures:
•
Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.
•
Increase the separation between the equipment and the
receiver.
•
Connect the equipment to an outlet on a circuit different
from that to which the receiver is connected.
•
Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician
for help.
12
Use and Care
Use and Care
Use and Ca re
To care for your Motorola phone, please keep it away from:
liquids of any kind dust and dirt
Don’t expose your phone to water, rain,
extreme humidity, sweat, or other moisture. If
it does get wet, don’t try to accelerate drying
with the use of an oven or dryer, as this may
damage the phone.
Don’t expose your phone to dust, dirt, sand,
food, or other inappropriate materials.
extreme heat or cold cleaning solutions
Avoid temperatures below 0°C/32°F or
above 45°C/113°F.
To clean your phone, use only a dry soft cloth.
Don’t use alcohol or other cleaning solutions.
microwaves the ground
Don’t try to dry your phone in a microwave
oven.
Don’t drop your phone.
Recycling Information
13
Caring for the Environment by Recycling
Recycling Information
This symbol on a Motorola product means the
product should not be disposed of with
household waste.
Disposal of your Mobile Device and
Accessories
Please do not dispose of mobile devices or electrical accessories
(such as chargers, headsets, or batteries) with your household
waste. These items should be disposed of in accordance with the
national collection and recycling schemes operated by your local or
regional authority. Alternatively, you may return unwanted mobile
devices and electrical accessories to any Motorola Approved
Service Center in your region. Details of Motorola approved
national recycling schemes, and further information on Motorola
recycling activities can be found at:
www.motorola.com/recycling
Disposal of your Mobile Device
Packaging and User’s Guide
Product packaging and user’s guides should only be disposed of in
accordance with national collection and recycling requirements.
Please contact your regional authorities for more details.
14
tips & tricks
tips & tricks
In the home screen (shown on page 17):
To... Do this...
change audio
style
With your phone
closed
, press a
volume key to see your audio
style, press the smart key to
change it, then press a volume
key to store the change.
check your
voicemail
Press and hold
1
to check your
voicemail.
see your
recent calls
Press
N
to see a list of recent
calls, then press
*
or
#
to
switch to
Dialed Calls
,
Received Calls
,or
Missed Calls
.
store a phone
number
Enter a phone number, then
press
Store
.
scroll through
phonebook
entries
In your phonebook, press a
number key to jump to entries
that begin with the letters on the
key. For example, press
5
three times to jump to the first
entry that starts with “
L
.”
scroll through
songs
In the music player song list,
press
*
or
#
to page up or
down.
use voice
commands
Press and hold
N
to open a list
of voice commands, then say one
of the commands on the list.
To... Do this...
15
tips & tricks
return to the
home screen
In a menu, message, or other
screen, press
O
to cancel and
return to the home screen.
To... Do this...
16
basics
basics
See page 1 for a basic phone diagram.
about this guide
This guide shows how to open a menu feature as
follows:
Find it:
s
>
eMessages
>
Create Message
This means that, from the home screen:
1
Press the center key
s
to open the menu.
2
Press the navigation key
S
to scroll to
eMessages
, and press the center key
s
to
select it.
3
Press the navigation key
S
to scroll to
Create Message
, and press the center key
s
to
select it.
symbols
This means a feature is network, SIM card,
or subscription dependent and may not be
available in all areas. Contact your service
provider for more information.
This means a feature requires an optional
accessory.
17
basics
display
The home screen appears when you turn on the
phone.
Note:
Your home screen might look different from the
one shown, depending on your service provider.
To dial a number from the home screen, press number
keys and
N
.
Press
S
up, down, left, or right in the home screen
to open basic menu features. To change your home
screen shortcuts and your main menu appearance,
see your Quick Start Guide.
Press the center key
s
to open the menu. Soft key
labels show the current soft key functions. For soft key
locations, see page 1.
Status indicators can show at the top of the home
screen:
1 Signal Strength Indicator –
Vertical bars show
the strength of the network connection. You can’t
make or receive calls when
1
or
0
appears.
Clock
Right Soft Key
Label
Left Soft Key
Label
Service Provider
Date
12:00
Options Main Menu
4. Roam
7. Message
6. Reminder
5. Active
Line
8. Ring Style
9. Battery
Level
3. Data
2. Network
1. Signal
Strength
Service Provider
Date
12:00
Options Main Menu
18
basics
2 Network Indicator –
Shows when your
phone is using a network that is 3G (
Y
),
Enhanced Data for GSM Evolution (EDGE, ), or
General Packet Radio Service (GPRS, ).
3 Data Indicator –
Shows connection
status.
4Roam Indicator –
Shows when your
phone is seeking or using a network
outside your home network. Indicators can
include:
5 Active Line Indicator –
Shows
h
to
indicate an active call, or
g
to indicate
L
/
K
secure / unsecure packet data
transfer
N
/
M
secure/unsecure application
connection
S
/
T
secure/unsecure Circuit Switch
Data (CSD) call
R
/
Q
USB connect/transfer
P
auto answer
U
MOTOSYNC
8
High-Speed Downlink Packet
Access (HSDPA) data transfer
O
Bluetooth® connection is active
b
2G home
c
2G roam
a
2.5G home
Z
2.5G roam
Y
3G home
X
3G roam
B
HSDPA home
A
HSDPA roam
HSDPA is High-Speed Downlink Packet
Access, available on some networks.
19
basics
when call forwarding is on. Indicators for
dual-line-enabled SIM cards can include:
6 Reminder Indicator –
Shows
6
when you set
an alarm, or an alert for a calendar event. Shows
when a Java™ application is active.
7 Message Indicator –
Shows when you
receive a new message. Indicators can
include:
8 Ring Style Indicator –
Shows the ring style
setting.
9 Battery Level Indicator –
Vertical bars show the
battery charge level. Recharge the battery when
your display shows
Low Battery
.
f
line 1 active
i
line 1 active, call
forward on
e
line 2 active
j
line 2 active, call
forward on
É
text message
Ë
voice message
voice & text message
õ
loud ring
Ì
vibrate & ring
ô
soft ring
ö
vibrate then ring
Î
vibrate
Í
silent
20
basics
text entry
Some features let you enter text.
Press
#
in a text entry view to select an entry
mode:
To set your primary and secondary text entry modes,
press
Options
>
Text Setup
in a text entry view and select
Primary Text
or
Secondary Text
.
For text
indicator
descriptions,
see following
section.
Flashing
cursor
indicates
insertion point.
After you
enter text,
press the
Send To
key to
enter
recipients.
Press the
Options
key to open the
sub-menu.
Msg
Options Send To
ÂÆ SMS:0
entry modes
Û
or
Ô
Your
Primary
text entry mode can be set to
any iTAP™
Û
or tap
Ô
mode.
Ú
or
Õ
Your
Secondary
text entry mode can be set
to any iTAP
Ú
or tap
Õ
mode, or set
to
None
if you don’t want a secondary
entry mode.
ÃNumeric
mode enters numbers only.
ÄSymbol
mode enters symbols only.
21
basics
iTAP™ and tap mode tips
•
Press
0
in a text entry view to change text
case to all capital letters (
á
), no capitals
(
Á
), or next letter capital (
Â
).
•
To enter numbers quickly, press and hold a
number key to temporarily switch to numeric
mode. Press the number keys to enter the
numbers you want. Enter a space to change
back to iTAP or Tap mode.
•
Press
1
to enter punctuation or other
characters.
•
Press
S
to move the flashing cursor to enter
or edit message text.
•
Press
(
to delete the character to the left of
the cursor. Hold
(
to delete the word.
•
To cancel your message, press
O
.
iTAP™ mode
Press
#
in a text entry view to switch to iTAP mode.
If you don’t see
Û
or
Ú
, press
Options
>
Text Setup
to
set iTAP mode as your primary or secondary text entry
mode.
iTAP mode lets you enter words using one keypress
per letter. The iTAP software combines your
keypresses into common words and predicts each
word as you enter it.
22
basics
For example, if you press
7764
, your
display shows:
If you want a different word (such as
Progress
), continue
pressing keypad keys to enter the remaining letters.
Tip:
Don’t worry if you forget how iTAP works. In a
text entry display, you can press
Options
>
Text Setup
>
Text Tutorial
to see an explanation.
tap and tap extended modes
Press
#
in a text entry view to switch to tap mode.
If you don’t see
ÂÔ
or
ÂÕ
, press
Options
>
Text Setup
to set tap mode as your primary or
secondary text entry mode.
To enter text in
Tap
mode, press a keypad key
repeatedly to cycle through the letters and number on
the key. Repeat this step to enter each letter. The
Tap Extended
mode works the same way, but includes
more special characters and symbols.
ÁÚ
Send To
Prog ram
Options
Msg
SMS:7
Press
Options
key to open
message
options.
Press
S
right to accept
Program
.
Press
*
to
enter a space
at the cursor.
Hold
S
up or
down to see a
list of word
options.
Press
Send To
key when the
message is complete.
23
basics
For example, if you press
7
one time, your display
shows:
The first character of every sentence is capitalized. If
necessary, press
S
down to change the character to
lowercase before the cursor moves to the next
position.
numeric mode
Press
#
in a text entry view until you see
Ã
.
Press the number keys to enter the numbers you
want.
Shortcut:
You can press and hold a number key to
temporarily switch to numeric mode from iTAP™ or
Tap modes. Press the number keys to enter the
numbers you want. Enter a space to change back to
iTAP mode.
symbol mode
Press
#
in a text entry view until your display shows
a list of symbols. Scroll to the symbol you want, then
press the center key
s
.
Msg
ÁÔ SMS:6
Character
displays at
insertion point.
After you enter
text, press the
Send To
key to
enter
recipients.
Press the
Options
key to
open message
options.
Your phone
suggests a
word. Press
S
right to accept
it, or press
*
to enter a space
at the cursor.
Options Send To
P age
24
basics
volume
Press the volume keys to:
•
turn off an incoming call alert
•
change the earpiece volume
during calls
•
change the ringer volume from the home
screen
Tip:
Sometimes silence really is golden. That’s
why you can quickly set your ringer to
Vibrate
or
Silent
by holding the down volume key while
you are in the home screen. You can also
switch to
Silent
or back by holding
#
in the
home screen.
To change your ringer volume when your phone is
closed, see page 27.
navigation key
Press the navigation key
S
up,
down, left, or right to scroll to items in
the display. When you scroll to an
item, press the center key
s
to
select it.
smart key
The smart key gives you another way to do things. For
example, when you scroll to a menu item, you can
press the smart key to select it (instead of pressing
the center key
s
). The smart key usually does the
same thing as pressing the center key
s
. To find the
smart key, see page 1. To change what the smart key
does in the home screen, see your Quick Start Guide.
Note:
With your phone closed, the smart key locks
and unlocks your external keys, and moves you back
out of menus in the external display.
25
basics
voice commands
You can use voice commands to tell your phone what
to do.
1
Press and hold
N
.
Your phone prompts you to say a command.
2
Say a voice command from the list (replace
555-1212 with a phone number, and replace John
Smith with a phonebook entry name):
voice commands
“
Call
555-1212”
“
Call
John Smith”
“
Send Email
John Smith”
“
Send Voice Note
555-1212”
“
Send Voice Note
John Smith”
“
Send Message
555-1212”
“
Send Message
John Smith”
“
Lookup
John Smith”
“
Go to Voicemail
”
“
Go to Camera
”
“
Go to Redial
”
“
Go to Received Calls
”
“
Check Status
”
Your phone tells you its battery strength, network
signal strength, and whether its coverage is normal
or roaming.
“
Check Battery
”
“
Check Signal
”
“
Check Network
”
“
Check My Phone Number
”
voice commands
26
basics
Tip:
•
You can say a phonebook entry’s name and
number type together. For example, say “Call
John Smith Mobile” to call the Mobile number
stored for John Smith.
•
Speak numbers at a normal speed and
volume, pronouncing each digit distinctly.
Don’t pause between digits.
•
For voice command help, press the
voice key
,
then press
Help
.
voice command setup
You can change voice command settings.
1
Press and release the
voice key
on the side of
the phone.
2
Press
Settings
.
3
Choose one of the settings below:
“
Turn Prompts Off
“
Your phone turns off the sound on your voice
command prompts (such as “Say a command.”). To
turn prompts on again, say “
Turn Prompts On
.”
Your phone confirms by saying “Voice prompts on.”
voice commands
voice command settings
Choice Lists
Turn choice lists on or off. Your
phone uses choice lists to confirm
voice commands by asking “Did
you say...” followed by a choice list
item.
Sensitivity
Make your phone more or less
likely to reject a voice command.
Digit Dialing
Train your phone to recognize how
you say digits.
27
basics
external display
When you close your phone, the external display
shows the date, status indicators, and notifications for
incoming calls and other events. For a list of phone
status indicators, see page 17. Some status indicators
do not appear in the external display.
To use the controls in your external display, see
your Quick Start Guide).
set phone ring style in external
display
1
Press a volume key to see
RingStyles
.
2
Press the smart key repeatedly, until the style you
want appears.
3
Press a volume key to return to the home screen.
handsfree speaker
You can use your phone’s handsfree speaker to make
calls without holding the phone to your ear.
To turn the handsfree speaker on during a call, press
Speaker
(if available), or
Options
>
Speakerphone On
. Your
display shows
Speakerphone On
until you turn it off or end
the call.
Note:
The handsfree speaker won’t work when your
phone is connected to a handsfree car kit or headset,
or if your phone is closed.
Sound
Adjust the sound settings for your
voice commands.
About
See voice command software
information.
voice command settings
28
basics
codes & passwords
Your phone’s four-digit
unlock code
is originally set to
1234
. The six-digit
security code
is originally set to
000000
. If your service provider didn’t change these
codes, you should change them:
Find it:
s
>
wSettings
>
Security
>
New Passwords
You can also change your
SIM PIN
or call barring
passwords.
If you forget your unlock code:
At the
Enter Unlock Code
prompt, try entering 1234 or the last four digits of your
phone number. If that doesn’t work, press
s
and
enter your six-digit security code instead.
If you forget other codes:
If you forget your security
code, SIM PIN code, PIN2 code, or call barring
password, contact your service provider.
lock & unlock phone
You can lock your phone to keep others from using it.
To lock or unlock your phone, you need the four-digit
unlock code.
To
manually lock
your phone:
Press
s
>
wSettings
>
Security
>
Phone Lock
>
Lock Now
,
then enter your four-digit unlock code.
To
automatically lock
your phone whenever you turn
it off: Press
s
>
wSettings
>
Security
>
Phone Lock
>
Automatic Lock
>
On
, then enter your four-digit unlock
code.
Note:
You can make emergency calls on a locked
phone (see page 34). A locked phone still rings or
vibrates for incoming calls or messages,
but you
need to unlock it to answer
.
29
personalize
personalize
time & date
Your phone can automatically update your time zone,
time, and date. It uses the time and date for the
calendar.
To
synchronize
the time zone, time, and date
with the network: Press
s
>
wSettings
>
InitialSetup
>
Time and Date
>
Autoupdate
>
Time & Time Zone
. If
you don’t want your phone to automatically update
your time zone and date, choose
Time Only
instead.
To
manually
set the time zone, time, and date, turn
off
Autoupdate
, then: Press
s
>
wSettings
>
Initial Setup
>
Time and Date
>
Time Zone
,time or date. To jump to a city
in the time zone list, enter the first letter of its name
by pressing keypad keys.
Tip:
To choose three time zones for easier access,
press
s
>
ÉTools
>
World Clock
. When you open
World Clock
, you can press
Options
to see the
MapView
of
time zones.
To choose an
analog or digital
clock for your home
screen, press
s
>
wSettings
>
Personalize
>
Home Screen
>
Clock
.
themes
A phone theme is a group of image and sound
files that you can apply to your phone. Most
themes include a wallpaper image, screen saver
image, display skin, and ring tone. Your phone may
come with some themes, and you can download
more.
30
personalize
To
apply
a theme, press
s
>
hMultimedia
>
Themes
>theme.
To
download
a theme, see page 71.
To
delete themes you downloaded
, press
s
>
hMultimedia
>
Themes
, scroll to the theme, and
press
Options
>
Delete
or
Delete All
.
To
preview
a theme, press
s
>
hMultimedia
>
Themes
, scroll to the theme, and press
Options
>
Preview
.
display appearance
Note:
The
Battery Save
feature tells your phone not to
light the display or keypad unless you’re in a dark
place. To turn on this feature, press
s
>
wSettings
>
Initial Setup
>
Battery Save
>
On
.
To choose a phone
skin
that sets the look and feel of
your phone’s display: Press
s
>
wSettings
>
Personalize
>
Skin
. Your theme can also set your phone skin
(page 29).
To set your display
brightness
: Press
s
>
wSettings
>
InitialSetup
>
Brightness
.
To save battery life, your keypad
backlight
turns off
when you’re not using your phone. The backlight turns
on when you open the flip or press any key. To set
how long your phone waits before the backlight turns
off:
Press
s
>
wSettings
>
InitialSetup
>
Backlight
.
To save battery life, the
display
can turn off when
you’re not using your phone. The display turns back on
when you open the flip or press any key. To set how
long your phone waits before the display turns off:
Press
s
>
wSettings
>
InitialSetup
>
Display Timeout
.
answer options
You can use different ways to answer an incoming call.
To turn on or turn off an answer option:
31
personalize
Find it:
s
>
wSettings
>
In-Call Setup
>
Answer Options
phone updates
Sometimes we think of ways to make your
phone’s software faster or more efficient after
you’ve purchased your phone. You can find out if your
phone can be updated at:
http://hellomoto.com/update
Note:
Software updates do not affect your phonebook
entries or other personal entries. If you receive a
software update but choose to install it later, see page
67.
options
Multi-Key
Answer by pressing any key.
Open to Answer
Answer by opening the flip.
32
calls
calls
To make and answer calls, see your Quick Start Guide.
turn off a call alert
You can press the volume keys to turn off a call alert
before answering the call.
recent calls
Your phone keeps lists of incoming and outgoing calls,
even for calls that didn’t connect. The most recent
calls are listed first. The oldest calls are deleted as
new calls are added.
Find it:
s
>
sRecent Calls
, then press
*
or
#
to switch to
Dialed Calls
,
Received Calls
,or
Missed Calls
Shortcut:
Press
N
from the home screen to see a
list of dialed calls.
Scroll to a call. A
%
next to a call means the call
connected.
•
To call the number, press
N
.
•
To see call details (like time and date), press
the center key
s
.
•
To see the
Last Calls Menu
, press
Options
. This menu
can include:
options
Filter by
Select all, dialed, received, or
missed calls.
33
calls
redial
1
Press
N
from the home screen to see a list of
recent calls.
Store
Create a phonebook entry with
the number in the
No.
field.
Video Call
Make a video call to the number.
Delete
Delete the entry.
Delete All
Delete all entries in the list.
Hide ID / Show ID
Hide or show your caller ID for
the next call.
Send Message
Open a new text message with
the number in the
To
field.
Send Voice Msg
Record and send a voice
message to the number.
Add Digits
Add digits after the number.
Attach Number
Attach a number from the
phonebook or recent calls lists.
options
Send Tones
Send the number to the network
as DTMF tones.
Note:
This option appears only
during a call
.
Notepad
Open the number in a text editor.
Call Times
Open your call time
information.
Call Cost
Open your call cost
information.
Copy All Text
Copy the selected number so
that you can paste it into a
message.
options
34
calls
2
Scroll to the entry you want to call, then press
N
.
If you hear a
busy signal
, and you see
Call Failed
,
you can press
N
or
Retry
to redial the number.
When the call goes through, your phone rings or
vibrates one time, shows
Redial Successful
, and connects
the call.
caller ID
Calling line identification (caller ID) shows the
phone number for an incoming call in your
external and internal displays.
Your phone shows the caller’s name and picture when
they’re stored in your phonebook, or
IncomingCall
when
caller ID information isn’t available.
You can set your phone to play a different ringer ID for
an entry stored in your phonebook (see page 55).
To show or hide
your phone number
from the next
person you call, enter the phone number and press
Options
>
Hide ID/Show ID
.
emergency calls
Your service provider programs one or more
emergency phone numbers, such as 911 or 112, that
you can call under any circumstances, even when your
phone is locked or the SIM card is not inserted.
Note:
Check with your service provider, as emergency
numbers vary by country. Your phone may not work in
all locations, and sometimes an emergency call cannot
be placed due to network, environmental, or
interference issues. Do not solely rely on your
wireless phone for essential communications such as
medical emergencies.
1
Press the keypad keys to dial the emergency
number.
35
calls
2
Press
N
to call the emergency number.
voicemail
Your network stores the voicemail messages
you receive. To listen to your messages, call
your voicemail number.
Note:
Your service provider may include additional
information about using this feature.
When you
receive
a voicemail message, your phone
shows the voicemail message indicator
Ë
and
New Voicemail
. Press
Call
to listen to the message.
To
check
voicemail messages:
Find it:
s
>
eMessages
>
Voicemail
Shortcut:
From the home screen, press and hold
1
to check your voicemail.
Your phone may prompt you to store your voicemail
phone number. If you don’t know your voicemail
number, contact your service provider.
Note:
You can’t store a
p
(pause),
w
(wait), or
n
(number) character in this number. If you want to store
a voicemail number with these characters, create a
phonebook entry for it. Then you can use the entry to
call your voicemail.
Tip:
To open a list of your
Missed Calls
, see page 32.
video calls
If you call someone who has a 3G video phone,
you can see each other while you talk. If your
phone is roaming on a
non-3G network
, video calls
will not work (see the Roam indicator on page 18).
36
calls
make a video call
1
Enter a phone number, press
d
, then close
your phone to make the call.
During the call:
•
Press
Stop Video
to change the call to a voice call
with the speakerphone on.
•
If you accept another
incoming voice call
,
your phone changes this video call to a voice
call.
•
If you accept another
incoming video call
,
your phone ends this video call.
2
To end the call, press
O
.
record a video call
Note:
Recording of phone calls is subject to varying
State and Federal laws regarding privacy and recording
of phone conversations. Always obey the laws and
regulations on the use of this feature.
You can record a video call as a video clip. During a
video call:
1
Press the camera key on the right side of your
phone to start recording the call.
Your phone displays
Recording
. It records incoming
video and incoming and outgoing audio.
2
Press the camera key again to stop recording the
call and store the video clip.
The recording stops automatically if the call ends
or you reach your video capture or memory limit.
To view the video clip from the home screen,
press
s
>
hMultimedia
>
MediaFinder
>
Videos
>
All Videos
> video name.
Note:
Video recording requires video compatibility
with the other caller’s video phone.
37
connections
connections
Bluetooth® wireless
Your phone supports Bluetooth wireless connections.
You can connect your phone with a Bluetooth headset
or car kit to make handsfree calls. You can also
connect your phone with a phone or computer that
supports Bluetooth connections to exchange files.
You can also use Bluetooth® A2DP stereo
headphones to listen to music files you store on your
phone.
Note:
The use of wireless phones while driving may
cause distraction. Discontinue a call if you can’t
concentrate on driving. Additionally, the use of
wireless devices and their accessories may be
prohibited or restricted in certain areas. Always obey
the laws and regulations on the use of these products.
For maximum Bluetooth security
, you should
always connect Bluetooth devices in a safe, private
environment.
use a headset or handsfree car kit
Note:
The use of wireless phones while driving may
cause distraction. Discontinue a call if you can’t
concentrate on driving. Additionally, the use of
wireless devices and their accessories may be
prohibited or restricted in certain areas. Always obey
the laws and regulations on the use of these products.
Before you try to connect your phone with a
handsfree device
, make sure the device is
on
and
ready
in pairing or bonding mode (see the user’s
guide for the device).
38
connections
Find it:
s
>
LConnection
>
Bluetooth Link
>
[Add Audio Device]
Your phone lists the devices it finds within range.
1
Scroll to a device in the list and press the
center key
s
.
2
Press
Yes
or
OK
to connect to the device.
3
If necessary, enter the device passkey (such as
0000
) and press
OK
.
When your phone is connected, the
Bluetooth indicator
O
appears in the home screen.
You cannot play some copyrighted files over a
Bluetooth connection.
Shortcut:
When your phone’s Bluetooth power is on,
your phone can automatically connect to a handsfree
device you have used before. Just turn on the device,
or move it near the phone. If the device doesn’t
connect, turn it off and back on. During a call or while
playing a sound file, you can press
Options
>
Use Bluetooth
to connect to a headset or handsfree device you have
used before.
Tip:
Want to know more about your headset or car kit?
For specific information about a device, refer to the
instructions that came with it.
copy files to another device
You can use a Bluetooth connection to copy a
media file, phonebook entry, calendar event, or
Web shortcut from your phone to a computer or other
device.
Note:
You can’t copy some copyrighted objects.
1
On your phone, scroll to the object that you want
to copy to the other device.
2
Press
Options
, then select:
•
Send
>
viaBluetooth
for media files.
•
Share
>
Contact
>
Bluetooth
for phonebook entries.
39
connections
•
Send
>
with Bluetooth
for calendar events.
3
Select a recognized device name, or
[Look For Devices]
to search for the device where you want to copy
the file.
If your phone could not copy the file to the other
device
, make sure the device is
on
and
ready
in
discoverable mode (see the user’s guide for the
device). Also, make sure the device is not busy with
another similar Bluetooth connection.
Note:
Once you connect your phone to a Bluetooth
device, that device can start similar Bluetooth
connections with your phone. Your display shows the
Bluetooth indicator
O
at the top when there is a
Bluetooth connection. To change a device’s
Access
setting, see page 42.
receive files from another device
If you do not see the Bluetooth indicator
O
at
the top of your phone display, turn on your
phone’s Bluetooth feature by pressing
s
>
LConnection
>
Bluetooth Link
>
Setup
>
Power
>
On
.
1
Place your phone near the device, and send the
file from the device.
If your phone and the sending device don’t
recognize each other, place your phone in
discoverable mode so the sending device can
locate it: press
s
>
LConnection
>
Bluetooth Link
>
Find Me
.
2
Press
Accept
on your phone to accept the file from
the other device.
Your phone notifies you when file transfer is complete.
If necessary, press
Save
to save the file.
send files to a printer
You can use a Bluetooth connection to send a
picture, message, phonebook entry, or calendar
view from your phone to a printer.
40
connections
Note:
You cannot print message
Templates
or a
phonebook
MailingList
.
1
On your phone, scroll to the object that you want
to print, then press
Options
>
Print
>
Bluetooth
. In the
calendar, you can print the month, week, or day.
Tip:
If you see it, you can print it. After you
capture a picture in the camera, you can press
Options
and select
Print
.
2
If available, choose additional objects or print
options.
3
Select a recognized printer name listed in the
Printers
menu, or
[Look For Devices]
to search for the
printer where you want to print the object.
Note:
If you see
Service Not Supported
when you try to
print, select
Options
>
Manage
>
Copy
>
Bluetooth
instead.
Always use this option to print 4x6 photos.
advanced Bluetooth features
A device is recognized after you connect to it once
(see page 37).
features
make phone
visible to
other device
Allow a Bluetooth device
to discover your phone:
s
>
LConnection
>
Bluetooth Link
>
Find Me
connect to
recognized
device
Connect your phone to a
recognized handsfree
device:
s
>
LConnection
>
Bluetooth Link
>
Audio Devices
> device name
41
connections
drop
connection
with headset
or handsfree
device
s
>
LConnection
>
Bluetooth Link
>
Audio Devices
Scroll to the device name and
press
Drop
.
switch to
headset or
handsfree
device during
call
During a call, press
Options
>
Use Bluetooth
to
switch to a recognized headset or
car kit.
Your phone connects
automatically, or shows a list of
devices you can select.
features
play sound
files on a
recognized
headset
While playing a sound file,
press
Options
>
Use Bluetooth
to
switch to a recognized headset.
Your phone connects
automatically, or shows a list of
devices you can select.
You cannot play some
copyrighted files over a Bluetooth
connection.
move
multimedia
object to
device
Caution:
Moving an object
deletes
the original object from
your phone.
Scroll to the object, press
Options
>
Manage
>
Move
,
select the device name. You
cannot move some copyrighted
files.
features
42
connections
cable connections
Yo u r
phone has
a micro-USB port
so you can
connect it to a
computer to
transfer data.
Note:
Motorola Original USB data cables
and supporting software may be sold
separately. Check your computer or
hand-held device to determine the type
of cable you need. To make
data calls
through a
connected computer, see page 65.
copy
multimedia
object to
device
Scroll to the object, press
Options
>
Manage
>
Copy
,
select the device name. You
cannot copy some copyrighted
files
edit device
properties
s
>
LConnection
>
Bluetooth Link
>
Found Devices
Scroll to the device name and
press the center key
s
.
Note:
The
Access
setting can
restrict how this device connects
to your phone. You can choose
Automatic
(always connects),
Always Ask
(asks you before
connecting),
Just Once
,
Never
, or
Custom
.
features
set Bluetooth
options
s
>
LConnection
>
Bluetooth Link
>
Setup
features
43
connections
connect your memory card to a
computer
You can use a cable connection to access your phone’s
memory card with a PC.
Note:
When your phone is connected to a computer,
you can only access the memory card through the
computer.
On your phone:
Disconnect the cable
from your phone, if it is
connected, then press
s
>
LConnection
>
USB Settings
>
Default Connection
>
Memory Card
.
This directs the USB connection to your memory card.
Connect the cable
to your phone and to an available
USB port on your computer. Then follow these steps:
On your computer:
1
Open your “My Computer” window, where your
phone’s memory card appears as a “Removable
Disk” icon.
2
Click on the “Removable Disk” icon to access the
files on your phone’s memory card.
3
To store the desired files onto the memory card,
drag and drop them as follows:
audio files:
> mobile > audio
screen savers:
> mobile > picture
wallpapers:
> mobile > picture
video clips:
> mobile > video
4
When you finish, disconnect your phone by
selecting the “Safely Remove Hardware” icon in
the system tray at the bottom of your computer
screen. Then disconnect the “USB Mass Storage
Device.”
5
Disconnect the cable from your phone and
computer.
44
connections
On your phone:
To return to
Data
as your USB default connection, press
s
>
LConnection
>
USB Settings
>
Default Connection
>
DataConnection
.
memory card
You can use a removable memory card with
your phone to store and retrieve multimedia
objects (such as photos and sounds).
To
install a memory card
, see
your Quick Start Guide.
Note:
If you download a copyrighted file and store it
on your memory card, you can use the file only while
your memory card is inserted in your phone. You
cannot send, copy, or change copyrighted files.
see and change memory card
information
To
see the files
stored on your memory card and on
your phone, open a file list, such as
Pictures
(see
your Quick Start Guide). Icons can indicate if a file is
stored in your phone memory (
®
) or on your
memory card (
©
). To copy or move a file from your
phone to your memory card, highlight it in the list and
press
Options
>
Manage
>
Copy
or
Move
>
Memory Card
. You
cannot copy or move some copyrighted files.
To
copy files
between your memory card and a
computer, you can use a cable connection (see
page 43) or a Bluetooth® connection (see page 38).
To see your
memory card name, available memory,
and other information about the card:
Find it:
s
>
wSettings
>
Phone Status
>
StorageDevices
1
Press
S
to scroll to the memory card that is
installed.
45
connections
2
Press the center key
s
to see the memory card
information. Your phone stores any content that
you add, like ring tones or games, in user
memory. Your service provider may store some
content in user memory before you receive the
phone.
or
Press
Options
to see the
StorageDevice
menu, which
lets you
Format
or
Rename
the memory card.
46
e-mail & messages
e-mail & messages
text messages
To create a group mailing list, see page 57. For more
message features, see page 58.
send a text message
A text message can contain text and pictures,
sounds, or other media objects. You can add
multiple pages to a message, and you can put text and
media objects on each page. You can send a message
to other compatible phones or to email addresses.
Find it:
s
>
eMessages
>
Create Message
>
New Message
1
Press keypad keys to enter text on the page (for
details about text entry, see page 20).
To insert a
picture, sound, or other object
on
the page, press
Options
>
Insert
. Select the file type
and the file.
2
When you finish the message, press
Send To
.
3
Scroll to a recipient and press the center key
s
.
Repeat to add other recipients.
To enter a
new
number or email address, press
Options
and select
Enter Number
or
Enter Email
.
4
To
send
the message, press
Send
.
receive a text message
When you receive a message, your phone
plays an alert, and the display shows
New Message
with a message indicator, such as
É
. Press
Read
to
open the message.
47
e-mail & messages
To see all of your text messages:
Find it:
s
>
eMessages
>
Message Inbox
If a multimedia message contains media objects:
•
Photos, pictures, and animations show as you
read the message.
•
A sound file plays when its slide shows. Use
the volume keys to adjust the sound volume.
•
Attached files are added to the end of the
message. To open an attachment, scroll to the
file indicator/file name and
press
View
(images),
Play
(sounds), or
Open
(phonebook vCards, calendar vCalendar
entries, or unknown file types).
blogs
You can use your phone to post text, pictures, video,
text and sounds to blog sites and online sharing
services.
set up a blog account
Note:
To blog from your phone, you must have
MMS messaging
enabled (contact your service
provider for details). Also, you must use a blog site
that lets you
post to an e-mail address
, such as
go@blog.com, or to a short code phone number
(contact the blog site for details).
Your phone may already have some fully and partially
configured
BlogAccounts
.
Find it:
s
>
ÉTools
>
BlogCentral
>
BlogSetup
>
BlogAccounts
>
[New Account]
1
Your phone will either show a blank
[New Account]
form or a list of partially configured blog accounts.
48
e-mail & messages
•
If you see a blank
[New Account]
form, proceed to
the next step.
•
If you see a list of blog accounts, you can
choose an account you want to finish
configuring, or choose
[New Account]
to set up a
new account. Then, proceed to the next step.
2
Enter the following details (if you do not know this
information, contact the blog site). The
Name
and
UploadTo
are required:
Name:
Whatever you want to name the account
(such as MyBlog).
UploadTo:
The short code phone number or e-mail
address for posting (such as go@blog.com or
youruserID@blog.com)
URL:
The blog site’s URL (such as www.blog.com),
which can appear in your post notifications
Notify To:
You can notify someone from your
phonebook when you post to the blog, if
Send Notification
is on.
Title:
The title that your phone uses for your posts
when
Auto Blog
is on.
3
Press
Done
to save the blog account details.
Tip:
To help make your posts quicker,
press
s
>
ÉTools
>
BlogCentral
>
BlogSetup
. Then, turn
on
Send Notification
to notify the people in your
Notify To
list
whenever you post to this blog account, or turn on
Auto Blog
to always post to one blog account (rather than
choosing a blog account each time you post).
post to a blog
After you set up a blog site, you can post to it.
Shortcut:
After you capture a picture or video, you can
press
Options
>
Post to Blog
to post it quickly.
Find it:
s
>
ÉTools
>
BlogCentral
>
New BlogMessage
49
e-mail & messages
1
Enter the text for your messsage, or press
Options
>
Insert
to add pictures, videos, or sounds.
2
Press
Post
or
Post To
to post the message.
50
other features—advanced calling
other features
advanced calling
features
attach a phone number
Dial an area code or prefix for a phonebook
number, then press
Options
>
Attach Number
.
notepad
s
>
sRecent Calls
, press
Options
, then >
Notepad
•
To call the number, press
N
.
•
To create a phonebook entry with the
number in the
No.
field, press
Store
.
•
To open the
DialingMenu
to attach a number or
insert a special character, press
Options
.
international calls
If your phone service includes international
dialing, press and hold
0
to insert your local
international access code (indicated by
+
). Then,
press the keypad keys to dial the country code and
phone number.
hold a call
Press
Options
>
Hold
to put all active calls on hold.
mute a call
Press
Mute
(if available) or
Options
>
Mute
to put all
active calls on mute.
features
other features—advanced calling
51
call waiting
When you’re on a call, you’ll hear an alert if
you receive a second call.
Press
N
to answer the new call.
•
To switch between calls, press
Switch
.
•
To connect the two calls, press
Options
>
Link
.
•
To end the call on hold, press
Options
>
End Call On Hold
.
To turn the call waiting feature on or off,
press
s
>
wSettings
>
In-Call Setup
>
Call Waiting
>
On
or
Off
conference call
During a call:
Dial the next number, press
N
, and press
Link
.
features
transfer a call
During a call:
Options
>
Transfer
, dial transfer number, press
N
automatic call forwarding
Set up or cancel automatic call forwarding:
s
>
wSettings
>
Call Forward
Choose
Voice Calls
or
Video Calls
to set up forwarding, or
Cancel All
to cancel forwarding.
You can set how long your phone waits before it
forwards a call (
5
,
10
,
15
,
20
, or
25
seconds).
features
52
other features—advanced calling
manual call forwarding
You can set your phone to forward an
incoming call only when you press a key.
To set the number where your phone forwards the
calls:
s
>
wSettings
>
Call Forward
>
Push to Call Fwd No.
, and
enter the phone number
To choose which key you press to forward incoming
calls:
s
>
wSettings
>
Personalize
>
Home Screen
>
Home Keys
,
select one of the key presses in the list, and then
select
Push to Call Forward
features
restrict calls
Restrict outgoing or incoming calls:
s
>
wSettings
>
Security
>
Restrict Calls
, then enter
your unlock code (see page 28)
Tell your phone to allow
All
,
None
, or only the calls
from your
Phonebook
.
call barring
Restrict your voice or video calls to block all
calls, international calls, or all calls except ones on
your home network.
s
>
wSettings
>
Security
>
Call Barring
features
other features—advanced calling
53
TTY calls
Set up your phone for use with an optional
TTY device:
s
>
wSettings
>
InitialSetup
>
TTY Setup
Note:
A teletypewriter (TTY) is a communication
device used by people who are hard of hearing or
have a speech impairment. TTY does not work from
mobile phone to mobile phone.
fixed dial
When you turn on fixed dialing, you can call
only numbers stored in the fixed dial list.
Turn fixed dialing on or off:
s
>
wSettings
>
Security
>
Fixed Dial
Use the fixed dial list:
s
>
ÉTools
>
DialingServices
>
Fixed Dial
features
service dial
Your service provider might give you phone
numbers for taxi companies or other services.
These phone numbers are stored on your SIM card.
To see them:
s
>
ÉTools
>
DialingServices
>
Service Dial
quick dial
Dial preprogrammed phone numbers:
s
>
ÉTools
>
DialingServices
>
Quick Dial
features
54
other features—phonebook
phonebook
To store and call phonebook entries, see
your Quick Start Guide.
DTMF tones
Activate DTMF tones:
s
>
wSettings
>
Initial Setup
>
DTMF
When you dial a number, your phone sends it to
your network as Dual Tone Multi Frequency (DTMF)
tones.
To send DTMF tones during a call, just press
number keys or scroll to a number in the phonebook
or recent calls lists and press
Options
>
Send Tones
.
features
features
assign a speed dial key to a phonebook entry
You can assign the keys
1
through
9
to
phonebook entries. Then, when you press and hold
a key, your phone calls the entry.
Note:
Your service provider might assign some
keys, such as
1
for your voicemail and
2
for
your videomail.
Press
s
>
nPhonebook
and scroll to the
phonebook entry. Then, press
Options
>
Add to Speed Dial
and pick a speed dial key.
other features—phonebook
55
use the speed dial key for a phonebook entry
To
use a speed dial key
that you assigned to a
phonebook entry, just press and hold the key while
in your home screen.
edit your speed dial keys
s
>
nPhonebook
, then press
Options
>
Setup
>
Speed DialList
edit or delete a phonebook entry
Edit a number stored in the phonebook:
s
>
nPhonebook
, scroll to the phonebook entry,
and press
Options
. You can select
Edit Contact
,
Delete Contact
,
or other options.
Shortcut:
In the phonebook, press keypad keys to
enter the first letters of an entry you want. You can
also press
*
and
#
to see the entries in other
categories.
features
set ringer ID for a phonebook entry
Assign a ring alert (ringer ID) to an entry:
s
>
nPhonebook
> entry, then press
Options
>
Edit Contact
>
Ringer ID
> ringer name
Note:
The
Ringer ID
option isn’t available for entries
stored on the SIM card. To copy an entry from SIM
to phone memory, see page 57.
To activate ringer IDs:
s
>
tRingStyles
> style
Detail
>
Ringer IDs
>
On
features
56
other features—phonebook
set picture ID for a phonebook entry
Assign a photo or picture to show when you receive
a call from an entry:
s
>
nPhonebook
> entry, then press
Options
>
Edit Contact
>
Picture
> picture name
Note:
The
Picture
option isn’t available for entries
stored on the SIM card. To copy an entry from SIM
to phone memory, see page 57.
set picture ID view for phonebook
Show entries as a text list, or with picture caller ID
photos:
s
>
nPhonebook
, then press
Options
>
Setup
>
View by
>view name
features
set category for a phonebook entry
s
>
nPhonebook
> entry, then press
Options
>
Edit Contact
>
Category
> category name
When you open your phonebook, press
*
or
#
to see your categories.
set category view for phonebook
s
>
nPhonebook
, then press
Options
>
Filter by
>
Category
>category name
Shortcut:
When you open your phonebook, press
*
or
#
to see your categories.
features
other features—phonebook
57
create group mailing list
You can put several phonebook entries in a group
mailing list, then send a message to the list. To
create a list:
s
>
nPhonebook
, then press
Options
>
Create New
>
MessageList
Note:
A
MessageList
cannot include entries stored on
the SIM card. To copy an entry from SIM to phone
memory, see page 57.
sort phonebook list
Set the order in which entries are listed:
s
>
nPhonebook
, then press
Options
>
Setup
>
Sort by
>
First Name
or
Last Name
features
copy one phonebook entry
Copy an entry from the phone to the SIM card, or
from the SIM card to the phone:
s
>
nPhonebook
, scroll to the entry, press
Options
>
Copy to SIM Card
or
Copy to Phone
copy multiple phonebook entries
Copy multiple phonebook entries between the
phone and SIM card:
s
>
nPhonebook
, then press
Options
>
Select Multiple to
,
and select
Copy Phone to SIM
or
Copy SIM to Phone
features
58
other features—messages
messages
For basic text message features, see page 46.
Your phone reads message settings from the USIM
card. If you put another USIM card in your phone, your
send phonebook entry to another device
Send a phonebook entry to another phone,
computer, or device:
s
>
nPhonebook
, scroll to the entry, press
Options
>
Share
>
Contact
For more information about copying files to another
device, see page 38.
features
print phonebook entry over Bluetooth®
connection
You can use a Bluetooth wireless connection to
send a phonebook entry from your phone to a
printer.
s
>
nPhonebook
Scroll to the entry you want to print, and press
Options
>
Select Multiple to
>
Print
.
You cannot print a
MailingList
. For more about
Bluetooth connections, see page 37.
features
other features—messages
59
phone sends and receives messages for the phone
number on the new card.
features
send email
s
>
eMessages
>
Create Message
>
New Email
send voice message
s
>
eMessages
>
Create Message
>
New Voice Msg
To record the voice message, press
Record
, speak,
then press
Stop
. Your phone inserts the voice
recording into a message and lets you enter email
addresses or phone numbers of the recipients.
use a message template
s
>
eMessages
>
Templates
>
Text Templates
or
MultimediaTemplates
Select a template to create a new message based
on the template.
features
60
other features—messages
read and manage messages
s
>
eMessages
>
Message Inbox
Icons next to each message indicate if it is read
>
or unread
<
. Icons can also indicate if the
message has an attachment
=
, might be SPAM
?
,
or is locked
9
, urgent
!
, or low priority
↓
.
To
Reply
,
Forward
,
Lock
, or
Delete
a message, scroll to it
and press
Options
.
To open a message, press
s
. Then, you can press
Options
to use or store any phone numbers,
email addresses, Web sites, or files in the
message.
features
read and manage email
s
>
eMessages
>
Email
To
Reply
,
Forward
,
Lock
, or
Delete
a message, scroll to it
and press
Options
.
To open a message, press
s
. Then, you can press
Options
to use or store any phone numbers,
email addresses, Web sites, or files in the
message.
store message objects
If you open a message that contains an
object such as a picture or file, scroll to the object
and press:
Options
>
Store
features
other features—personalizing
61
personalizing
print message over
Bluetooth® connection
You can use a Bluetooth wireless connection to
send a message from your phone to a printer.
s
>
eMessages
>
Message Inbox
,
Email Msgs
,
Outbox
, or
Drafts
Scroll to the message you want to print and press
Options
>
Print
.
You cannot print message
Templates
. For more about
Bluetooth connections, see page 37.
store text messages on your SIM card
To store incoming text messages on your
SIM card, press:
s
>
eMessages
, then press
Options
>
Setup
>
MessageSetup
>
Text MsgSetup
>
Default Storage
>
SIM Card
features
browser messages
Read messages received by your
micro-browser:
s
>
eMessages
>
Browser Msgs
info services
Read subscription-based information
services messages:
s
>
eMessages
>
Info Services
features
language
Set menu language:
s
>
wSettings
>
Initial Setup
>
Language
features
62
other features—personalizing
scroll
Set the scroll bar to
Up/Down
or
Wrap Around
in menu
lists:
s
>
wSettings
>
Initial Setup
>
Scroll
text marquee
Set the speed for scrolling text in your
display:
s
>
wSettings
>
Initial Setup
>
Text Marquee
activate ringer IDs
Activate ringer IDs assigned to phonebook entries
and categories:
st
>
RingStyles
> style
Detail
>
Ringer IDs
ring volume
s
>
t
>
RingStyles
> style
Detail
>
RingVolume
features
keypad volume
s
>
t
>
RingStyles
> style
Detail
>
Key Volume
reminders
Set a reminder for when you have not responded to
an incoming call, message, or other event:
s
>
t
>
RingStyles
> style
Detail
>
Reminders
master reset
Reset all options
except
unlock code, security
code, and lifetime timer:
s
>
wSettings
>
InitialSetup
>
Master Reset
features
other features—call times & costs
63
call times & costs
Network connection time
is the elapsed time from
the moment you connect to your service provider's
network to the moment you end the call by pressing
O
. This time includes busy signals and ringing.
The amount of network connection time you track
on your resettable timer may not equal the
amount of time for which you are billed by your
service provider. For billing information, contact
your service provider.
master clear
Caution:
Master clear
erases all information you
have entered
(including phonebook and calendar
entries)
and content you have downloaded
(including photos and sounds) stored in your
phone’s memory. After you erase the information,
you can’t recover it.
s
>
wSettings
>
InitialSetup
>
Master Clear
features
features
call times
Show call timers:
s
>
sRecent Calls
, press
Options
, then >
Call Times
in-call timer
Show time or cost information during a call:
s
>
wSettings
>
In-Call Setup
>
In-Call Timer
in-call date and time display
Show the current date and time during voice
calls:
s
>
wSettings
>
In-Call Setup
>
Date and Time
64
other features—handsfree
handsfree
Note:
The use of wireless phones while driving may
cause distraction. Discontinue a call if you can’t
concentrate on driving. Additionally, the use of
wireless devices and their accessories may be
prohibited or restricted in certain areas. Always obey
the laws and regulations on the use of these products.
call cost
Show call cost trackers:
s
>
sRecent Calls
, press
Options
, then >
Call Cost
features
speakerphone
Activate the speakerphone during a call:
Press
Speaker
(if available), or
Options
>
Speakerphone On
.
features
auto answer
(car kit or headset)
Automatically answer calls when connected
to a car kit or headset:
s
>
wSettings
>
Car Settings
or
Headset
>
Auto Answer
voice dial
(headset)
Enable voice dial with headset send/end key:
s
>
wSettings
>
Headset
>
Voice Dial
auto handsfree
(car kit)
Automatically route calls to a car kit when
connected:
s
>
wSettings
>
Car Settings
>
Auto Handsfree
features
other features—data calls
65
data calls
To connect your phone with a USB cable, see page 42.
features
send data
Connect your phone to the device, then
place the call through the device application.
receive data
Connect your phone to the device, then
answer the call through the device application.
use sync
You can call a SyncML Internet server and
synchronize your phonebook and calendar
entries with the server.
To
set up
an Internet sync partner, press
s
>
LConnection
>
MOTOSYNC
>
Sync
>
[New Entry]
.
Enter the server details, including
Server URL
(you can
omit
http://
) and
DataPath
(the folder below the URL
where your data is stored).
To
synchronize files
with a partner you set up,
select the partner from the list in
s
>
LConnection
>
MOTOSYNC
>
Sync
.
features
66
other features—network
network
set up ActiveSync
You can use the Internet to synchronize your
phone’s phonebook and calendar entries with an
email account on a Microsoft® Exchange 2003
Server.
You need to know the email account’s
user name
and
password
, the Microsoft® Exchange
server
name
, and the
user domain name
. Confirm that
the
Mobility
option is enabled on the email
account, and that
data service
is activated with
your phone service provider.
To
set up
an ActiveSync partner, press
s
>
LConnection
>
MOTOSYNC
>
Exchange
, press
Options
,
then >
Setup
. Enter the server details, including
Server Name
,
Domain
, and the
Web Session
to use. To set up
a
Web Session
, see page 71.
features
use ActiveSync
Once you set up an ActiveSync partner, you
can schedule your phone to synchronize with the
account automatically.
To
schedule
synchronization, press
s
>
LConnection
>
MOTOSYNC
>
Exchange
, press
Options
,
then >
Auto Sync Setup
. Enter the time and days you
want your phone to synchronize.
features
network settings
See network information and adjust network
settings:
s
>
wSettings
>
Network
features
other features—personal organizer
67
personal organizer
software update
Your service provider can send updated
phone software over the air to your phone. When
your phone receives a software update, you can
choose to download it and install it later. To install a
software update you downloaded:
s
>
wSettings
>
Phone Status
>
Software Update
>
Install Now
Note:
To check for a software update, select
Check for Updates
from the
Software Update
menu.
features
features
set alarm
s
>
AAlarm Clock
Note:
Alarms will sound even when your phone is
turned off.
turn off alarm
When an alarm happens: To turn off the alarm,
press
Disable
or
O
. To set an eight-minute delay,
press
Snooze
.
Note:
Snooze
is available only if the phone is already
powered on when the alarm sounds.
68
other features—personal organizer
add new calendar event or task
Your calendar can store events (with a start and end
time that can repeat) or tasks (with a due date).
s
>
MCalendar
, scroll to the day, press
s
, press
Options
>
Create New Event
or
Create New Task
see calendar event or task
See or edit event or task details:
s
>
MCalendar
, scroll to the day, press
s
Tip:
Keeping up with life can be tough work. To see
a list of your upcoming events or tasks, open the
calendar and press
Options
>
View
>
Organized Events
or
Organized Tasks
.
features
change calendar settings
s
>
MCalendar
, then press
Options
>
Setup
You can choose the
Default View
that appears when
you open your calendar, and you can show or hide
the
Tasks On DayView
. You can tell your phone to
Power On
if it is turned off when a calendar alert occurs. Turn
on
LunarCalendar
if you do not want to use a solar
calendar.
calendar event reminder
When an event reminder happens:
To see reminder details, press
View
.
To close the reminder, press
Back
.
features
other features—personal organizer
69
send calendar event to another device
Send a calendar event to another phone, computer,
or device:
s
>
MCalendar
, scroll to the day, press
s
, scroll
to the event, press
Options
>
Send
print calendar month, week, or day over
Bluetooth® connection
You can use a Bluetooth wireless connection to
send a calendar month, week, or day from your
phone to a printer.
s
>
MCalendar
Go to the month, week, or day view and press
Options
>
Print
.
For more about Bluetooth connections, see
page 37.
features
create voice record
s
>
hMultimedia
>
Voice Record
When you are ready, press
s
and speak into the
phone.
play voice record
Play back a voice record:
s
>
hMultimedia
>
MediaFinder
>
Voice Notes
>
All Voice Notes
, scroll to the voice record, and press
the center key
s
calculator
s
>
ÉTools
>
Calculator
features
70
other features—security
security
currency converter
s
>
ÉTools
>
Calculator
, then press
Options
>
ExchangeRate
Enter exchange rate, press
OK
, enter amount, and
press
Options
>
Convert Currency
.
features
SIM PIN
Caution:
If you enter an incorrect PIN code three
times before the correct code, your SIM card is
disabled and your display shows
SIM Blocked
.
Lock or unlock the SIM card:
s
>
wSettings
>
Security
>
SIM PIN
features
lock feature
s
>
wSettings
>
Security
>
Lock Application
Enter your unlock code to open a list of applications
(such as
Messaging
). Select an application and choose
Locked
to lock it.
manage certificates
Enable or disable Internet access certificates
stored on your phone:
s
>
wSettings
>
Security
>
Certificate Mgmt
Certificates are used to verify the identity and
security of Web sites when you download files or
share information.
features
other features—fun & games
71
fun & games
Note:
Icons next to a picture, sound, or other object
can indicate if the file is locked (
9
), or if it is stored on
your phone
®
or on your memory card (
©
).
For basic information on the camera, see
your Quick Start Guide.
features
start micro-browser
Just press
L
.
Your phone reads micro-browser settings from the
USIM card. When you remove the USIM card, your
phone clears the browser cache. To edit your
settings, press
s
>
áWeb Access
>
Web Sessions
.
download objects from Web page
Download a picture, sound, or other object
from a Web page:
Press
L
, go to the page that links to the file, scroll
to the link, and select it.
Note:
Some file formats are not supported.
Web sessions
A Web Session stores settings that your
phone uses to access the Internet. To select or
create a Web session:
s
>
áWeb Access
>
Web Sessions
features
72
other features—fun & games
clear micro-browser history
Clear the micro-browser’s history, cache, or
cookies:
s
>
áWeb Access
>
Browser Setup
>
ClearHistory
,
Reset Cache
, or
ClearCookies
download game or application
You can download a Java™ game or
application the same way you download pictures or
other objects:
Press
L
, go to the page that links to the file, scroll
to the link, and select it.
features
start game or application
Start a Java™ game or application:
s
>
QGames & Apps
, scroll to the game or
application, press the center key
s
To
install
and run games stored on your memory
card, press
s
>
QGames & Apps
>
[Install New]
.
features
other features—fun & games
73
airplane mode
You can switch your phone to airplane mode to
prevent it from communicating with the network.
This lets you use games or other applications while
you are on an airplane, without interfering with
airplane communications.
Note:
Your phone cannot make
Bluetooth® connections when
Airplane Mode
is on.
s
>
wSettings
>
Airplane Mode
>
Airplane Mode
>
On
You can make the airplane mode option appear
whenever you turn on your phone:
s
>
wSettings
>
Airplane Mode
>
Prompt At Startup
>
On
features
74
service and repairs
service and repairs
If you have questions or need assistance, we're here
to help.
Go to
www.hellomoto.com/support
, where you can
select from a number of customer care options. You
can also contact the Motorola Customer Support
Center at 1-800-331-6456 (United States),
1-888-390-6456 (TTY/TDD United States for hearing
impaired), or 1-800-461-4575 (Canada).
SAR Data
75
Specific Absorption Rate Data
SAR Data
This model meets international guidelines for
exposure to radio waves.
Your mobile device is a radio transmitter and receiver. It is
designed not to exceed the limits for exposure to radio waves
recommended by international guidelines. These guidelines were
developed by the independent scientific organization ICNIRP and
include safety margins designed to assure the protection of all
persons, regardless of age and health.
The guidelines use a unit of measurement known as the Specific
Absorption Rate, or SAR. The ICNIRP SAR limit for mobile devices
used by the general public is 2 W/kg and the highest SAR value for
this device when tested at the ear is ___ W/kg.
1
As mobile
devices offer a range of functions, they can be used in other
positions, such as on the body as described in this user’s guide.
2
In
this case, the highest tested SAR value is ___ W/kg.
1
As SAR is measured utilizing the device’s highest transmitting
power, the actual SAR of this device while operating is typically
below that indicated above. This is due to automatic changes to
the power level of the device to ensure it only uses the minimum
level required to reach the network.
While there may be differences between the SAR levels of various
phones and at various positions, they all meet the governmental
requirements for safe exposure. Please note that improvements to
this product model could cause differences in the SAR value for
later products; in all cases, products are designed to be within the
guidelines.
The World Health Organization has stated that present scientific
information does not indicate the need for any special precautions
for the use of mobile devices. They note that if you want to reduce
your exposure then you can do so by limiting the length of calls or
using a “handsfree” device to keep the mobile phone away from
the head and body.
Additional Information can be found on the websites of the World
Health Organization (
http://www.who.int/emf
) or Motorola, Inc.
(
http://www.motorola.com/rfhealth
).
1. The tests are carried out in accordance with international guidelines for
testing. The limit incorporates a substantial margin for safety to give
additional protection for the public and to account for any variations in
measurements. Additional related information includes the Motorola
testing protocol, assessment procedure, and measurement uncertainty
range for this product.
2. Please see the Safety and General Information section about body worn
operation.
76
WHO Information
Information from the World Health Organization
WHO Information
Present scientific information does not indicate the need for any
special precautions for the use of mobile phones. If you are
concerned, you may want to limit your own or your children’s RF
exposure by limiting the length of calls or by using handsfree
devices to keep mobile phones away from your head and body.
Source: WHO Fact Sheet 193
Further information:
http://www.who.int./peh-emf
Privacy and Data Security
Privacy and Data Security
Motorola understands that privacy and data security are important
to everyone. Because some features of your mobile device may
affect your privacy or data security, please follow these
recommendations to enhance protection of your information:
• Monitor access
—Keep your mobile device with you and
do not leave it where others may have unmonitored
access. Lock your device’s keypad where this feature is
available.
• Keep software up to date
—If Motorola or a
software/application vendor releases a patch or software
fix for your mobile device which updates the device’s
security, install it as soon as possible.
• Erase before recycling
—Delete personal information
or data from your mobile device prior to disposing of it or
turning it in for recycling. For step-by-step instructions on
how to delete all personal information from your device,
see the section entitled “master clear” or “delete data” in
this user’s guide.
Note:
For information on backing up your mobile device
data before erasing it, go to
www.motorola.com
and then
navigate to the “downloads” section of the consumer Web
page for “Motorola Backup” or “Motorola Phone Tools.”
• Understanding AGPS
—In order to comply with
emergency caller location requirements of the FCC, certain
Motorola mobile devices incorporate Assisted Global
Driving Safety
77
Positioning System (AGPS) technology. AGPS technology
also can be used in non-emergency applications to track
and monitor a user’s location—for example, to provide
driving directions. Users who prefer not to permit such
tracking and monitoring should avoid using such
applications.
If you have further questions regarding how use of your mobile
device may impact your privacy or data security, please contact
Motorola at
privacy@motorola.com
, or contact your service
provider.
Smart Practices While Driving
Driving Safety
Drive Safe, Call Smart
SM
Check the laws and regulations on the use of mobile
devices and their accessories in the areas where you drive.
Always obey them. The use of these devices may be
prohibited or restricted in certain areas. Go to
www.motorola.com/callsmart
for more information.
Your mobile device lets you communicate by voice and
data—almost anywhere, anytime, wherever wireless service is
available and safe conditions allow. When driving a car, driving is
your first responsibility. If you choose to use your mobile device
while driving, remember the following tips:
• Get to know your Motorola mobile device and its
features such as speed dial and redial.
If available,
these features help you to place your call without taking
your attention off the road.
• When available, use a handsfree
device.
If possible, add an additional
layer of convenience to your mobile device
with one of the many Motorola Original
handsfree accessories available today.
• Position your mobile device within easy reach.
Be
able to access your mobile device without removing your
eyes from the road. If you receive an incoming call at an
inconvenient time, if possible, let your voice mail answer
it for you.
• Let the person you are speaking with know you are
driving; if necessary, suspend the call in heavy
traffic or hazardous weather conditions.
Rain, sleet,
snow, ice, and even heavy traffic can be hazardous.
78
Driving Safety
• Do not take notes or look up phone numbers while
driving.
Jotting down a “to do” list or going through your
address book takes attention away from your primary
responsibility—driving safely.
• Dial sensibly and assess the traffic; if possible,
place calls when your car is not moving or before
pulling into traffic.
If you must make a call while
moving, dial only a few numbers, check the road and your
mirrors, then continue.
• Do not engage in stressful or emotional
conversations that may be distracting.
Make people
you are talking with aware you are driving and suspend
conversations that can divert your attention away from the
road.
• Use your mobile device to call for help.
Dial 911 or
other local emergency number in the case of fire, traffic
accident, or medical emergencies.*
• Use your mobile device to help others in
emergencies.
If you see an auto accident, crime in
progress, or other serious emergency where lives are in
danger, call 911 or other local emergency number, as you
would want others to do for you.*
• Call roadside assistance or a special
non-emergency wireless assistance number when
necessary.
If you see a broken-down vehicle posing no
serious hazard, a broken traffic signal, a minor traffic
accident where no one appears injured, or a vehicle you
know to be stolen, call roadside assistance or other
special non-emergency wireless number.*
* Wherever wireless phone service is available.
index
79
index
A
accessories 16, 64
accessory connector port 1
active line indicator 18
ActiveSync 66
airplane mode 73
alarm clock 67
alarm indicator 19
alert
set 24, 27
turn off 24, 32
alert indicator 19
answer a call 30
attach a number 33, 50
B
backlight 30
battery indicator 19
battery life, extending 30
blogs 47
Bluetooth connection
description 37
messages, printing 61
phonebook entries 58
restricting access 42
brightness 30
browser messages 61
browser. See micro-browser
C
cables 42
calculator 69
calendar 68, 69
call
answering 30
barring 28, 52
ending 36
forwarding 51, 52
recording 36
timers 63
waiting 51
call forward indicator 18
caller ID 33, 34, 56
car kit 64
categories 56
center key 1, 24
center select key 16
certificate management 70
clock 29
codes 28
conference call 51
80
index
copy files 38
costs, tracking 64
D
data call 65
data indicator 18
date, setting 29
dial a phone number 53
dialed calls 32
display 3, 17, 30
downloaded files
from Web pages 71
in messages 60
DTMF tones 33, 54
E
earpiece volume 24
email
reading and managing 60
sending 59
emergency number 34
end a call 36
end key 1
Enter Unlock Code message 28
external display 27
F
fax call 65
fixed dial 53
flip 31
forward calls 51, 52
G
games 72
group mailing list 57
H
handsfree speaker 27
headset 64
headset jack 1
hold a call 50
home screen 3, 17
I
in-call indicator 18
Incoming Call message 34
information services 61
international access code 50
iTAP text entry mode 21
J
Java applications 72
Java indicator 19
K
keypad 31, 62
L
language 61
linking. See Bluetooth connection
lock
application 70
phone 28
index
81
SIM card 70
Low Battery message 19
M
master clear 63
master reset 62
memory card 44
menu 3, 16, 17, 62
menu icons 17
message 59, 60, 61
message indicator 19, 46
message reminders 62
micro-browser 61, 71, 72
Microsoft license agreement 78
MMS, defined 46
MOTOSYNC 65, 66
multimedia message 46, 59, 60,
61
mute a call 50
N
navigation key 1, 16, 24
network indicator 18
network settings 66
notepad 50
numeric entry mode 23
O
object exchange 38
1-touch dial 55
open to answer 31
optional accessory 16
optional feature 16
P
pairing. See Bluetooth connection
passwords. See codes
personalize 61
phonebook 33, 50, 54, 55
picture ID 34, 56
PIN code 28, 70
PIN2 code 28
power key 1
printing 39
Q
quick dial 53
R
received calls 32
recent calls 32
recording a call 36
redial 33
reminder indicator 19
reminders 62
restrict calls 52
ring style indicator 19
ring style, setting 24, 27
ringer ID 34, 55, 62
ringer volume 24, 62
roam indicator 18
82
index
S
safety information 7
safety tips 82
scrolling 62
security code 28
send key 1
service dial 53
signal strength indicator 17
SIM Blocked message 70
SIM card 28, 53, 61, 70
skin 30
smart key 24, 27
soft keys 1, 17
software update 67
speakerphone 64
speed dial 54, 55
symbol entry mode 23
synchronizing 65, 66
T
tap text entry mode 22
text entry 20
text marquee 62
text message 60, 61
theme 29
time zone 29
time, setting 29
timers 63
transfer a call 51
TTY device 53
U
unlock
application 70
phone 28
SIM card 70
unlock code 28
USB cables 42
V
voice commands 25
voice dial 25, 64
voice message 59
voice record 69
voicemail 35
voicemail message indicator 19,
35
volume 24, 62
W
Web pages 71
Web sessions 71
WHO information 77
U.S. patent Re. 34,976