Motorola Mobility T5HT1 Portable Cellular CDMA Transceiver with Bluetooth User Manual Singapore Generic CDMA

Motorola Mobility LLC Portable Cellular CDMA Transceiver with Bluetooth Singapore Generic CDMA

Exhibit 8 Users Manual

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Document ID799868
Application IDX1ye/bAG/61qyVb4/ygv7w==
Document DescriptionExhibit 8 Users Manual
Short Term ConfidentialNo
Permanent ConfidentialNo
SupercedeNo
Document TypeUser Manual
Display FormatAdobe Acrobat PDF - pdf
Filesize178.78kB (2234718 bits)
Date Submitted2007-06-04 00:00:00
Date Available2007-07-19 00:00:00
Creation Date2006-09-25 16:01:51
Producing SoftwareAcrobat Distiller 7.0.5 (Windows)
Document Lastmod2007-05-21 16:46:37
Document TitleSingapore.Generic.CDMA.fm
Document CreatorFrameMaker 7.2
Document Author: rqg634

APPLICANT: MOTOROLA,INC.
FCC ID: IHDT5HT1
INSTRUCTION MANUAL
A preliminary draft of the User’s Manual follows this page.
EXHIBIT 8
HELLOMOTO
Introducing your new MOTORAZR™ V9m CDMA wireless phone.
Voice Key
Create voice
records, activate
speech dialing &
voice commands.
Smart/
Speakerphone
Key
Volume Keys
Send Key
Make & answer
calls.
Accessory
Connector Port
Insert charger &
phone
accessories.
Right Soft Key
Perform function
in lower right
display.
Clear Key
Power & End Key
Turn phone
on/off, end calls,
exit menu
system.
Left Soft Key
Perform
function in
lower left
display.
Camera Key
Camera Lens
040128o
Smart/
Speakerphone
Key
Take self-portrait
photo with
camera when flip
is closed.
External Charge
Indicator Light
Appears when
phone is being
charged.
External Display
View incoming
call information,
use as camera
viewfinder when
flip is closed.
4-Way Navigation Key
with Center Select
From home screen, press
center key to open main menu.
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 and Windows are registered trademarks
of Microsoft Corporation; and Windows XP is a trademark of
Microsoft Corporation.
© Motorola, Inc., 2006.
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.
Manual Number: 68095XXXXX-O
contents
menu map. . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Use and Care . . . . . . . . . 7
essentials . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
about this guide . . . . . . 8
battery . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
turn it on & off . . . . . . . 11
make a call . . . . . . . . . . 11
answer a call. . . . . . . . . 11
adjust volume . . . . . . . 12
change the call alert . . 12
store a phone number 12
call a stored phone
number. . . . . . . . . . . . 13
view your phone
number. . . . . . . . . . . . 13
main attractions . . . . . . 14
airplane mode. . . . . . . 14
MP3 music player. . . .
record & play video
clips . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
take & send photo . . .
send a multimedia
message. . . . . . . . . . .
receive a multimedia
message. . . . . . . . . . .
memory card . . . . . . .
cable connections. . . .
Bluetooth®
connections . . . . . . . .
basics. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
home screen . . . . . . .
menu shortcuts . . . . .
enter text . . . . . . . . . .
external display. . . . . .
14
24
26
29
32
33
39
39
42
42
45
46
52
handsfree speaker . . .
codes & passwords . .
lock & unlock phone . .
customize . . . . . . . . . . .
ring styles & alerts . . .
answer options. . . . . .
wallpaper . . . . . . . . . .
set screen saver . . . . .
brightness. . . . . . . . . .
display timeout . . . . . .
backlight . . . . . . . . . . .
talking phone settings
AGPS & your location .
AGPS limitations & tips
contents
53
54
55
56
56
57
57
58
59
59
59
59
60
61
calls. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
turn off a call alert . . . .
redial a number . . . . . .
automatic redial . . . . . .
recent calls . . . . . . . . .
return a missed call . . .
notepad . . . . . . . . . . . .
attach number . . . . . . .
emergency calls . . . . .
AGPS during an
emergency call . . . . . .
speed dial . . . . . . . . . .
voicemail . . . . . . . . . . .
other features . . . . . . . .
advanced calling . . . . .
phonebook. . . . . . . . . .
messages . . . . . . . . . .
personalize . . . . . . . . .
call times . . . . . . . . . . .
handsfree . . . . . . . . . .
data & fax calls . . . . . .
contents
62
62
62
62
62
64
64
64
64
65
66
66
68
68
69
72
74
79
80
82
network . . . . . . . . . . . . 82
personal organizer . . . . 83
security . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
fun & games . . . . . . . . 85
service & repairs . . . . . . 87
SAR Data . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
Safety Information . . . . 92
Industry Canada Notice 97
FCC Notice . . . . . . . . . . . 98
Warranty. . . . . . . . . . . . . 99
Hearing Aids . . . . . . . . 103
WHO Information . . . . 104
Registration . . . . . . . . . 104
Export Law. . . . . . . . . . 105
Recycling . . . . . . . . . . . 105
Perchlorate Label. . . . . 106
Driving Safety . . . . . . . 107
index. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
menu map
main menu
n Contacts
s Recent Calls
•
•
•
•
•
•
Received
Dialed
Notepad
Call Times
Data Times
Data Volumes
Messaging
• Create Message
• Message Inbox
• Voicemail
• Browser Alerts
• Outbox
• Drafts
• Templates
BREW
É
Tools
• Calculator
• Datebook
• Voice Records
• Alarm Clock
Phone Status
• My Tel. Number
• Battery Meter
• Storage Devices
• Other Information
Web Browser
Media Gallery
• Camera
• MP3 Player
• Pictures
• Sounds
• Videos
• Video Camera
• Themes
Settings
• (see next page)
* optional features
This is the standard main menu layout. Your
phone’s menu may be a little different.
menu map
settings menu
t Ring Styles
• Style
• Style Detail
Personalize
• Home Screen
• Main Menu
• Voice Dial Setup
• Skin
• Greeting
• Wallpaper
• Screen Saver
• Slide Tone
• Sound Settings
In-Call Setup
• In-Call Timer
• Answer Options
• MSG Alert
Airplane Mode
• Airplane Mode
• Prompt At Startup
menu map
Æ
Security
• Phone Lock
• Keypad Lock
• Lock Application
• Restrict Calls
• New Passwords
Initial Setup
• SpeakerPhone
• Auto Redial
• Backlight
• TTY Setup
• Scroll
• Slide Closed
• Language
• Battery Save
• Brightness
• DTMF
• Hyphenation
• Master Reset
• Master Clear
Network
• Current Network
• Set Mode
• Service Tone
• Call Drop Tone
Car Settings
• Auto Answer
• Auto Handsfree
• Power-off Delay
• Charger Time
Headset
• Auto Answer
• Voice Dial
Location
Connection
• Bluetooth Link
• Incoming Call
• USB Settings
Use and Care
Use and Care
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.
Don’t expose your phone to dust, dirt, sand,
food, or other inappropriate materials.
extreme heat or cold
cleaning solutions
Avoid temperatures below -10°C/14°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.
Use and Care
essentials
CAUTION: Before using the phone for the
first time, read the Important Safety and
Legal Information included in the
gray-edged pages at the back of this guide.
032259o
about this guide
This guide shows how to locate a menu
feature as follows:
Find it: s > s Recent Calls > Received
This means that, from the home screen:
1 Press the center key s to open the
menu.
essentials
2 Press the navigation key S to scroll to
s Recent Calls, and press the center key s
to select it.
3 Press the navigation key S to scroll to
Received Calls, and press the center key s
to select it.
symbols
This means a feature is network/
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.
battery
• Never expose batteries to
temperatures below -10°C (14°F) or
above 45°C (113°F). Always take your
phone with you when you leave your
vehicle.
battery tips
Battery life depends on the network, signal
strength, temperature, features, and
accessories you use.
• Always use Motorola
Original batteries and
chargers. The warranty does
not cover damage caused by
non-Motorola batteries and/or chargers.
• New batteries or batteries stored for a
long time may take more time to
charge.
• When charging your battery, keep it
near room temperature.
• It is normal for batteries to gradually
wear down and require longer charging
times. If you notice a change in your
battery life, it is probably time to
purchase a new battery.
032375o
Contact your local recycling center for
proper battery disposal.
Warning: Never dispose of batteries in a fire
because they may explode.
Before using your phone, read the battery
safety information in the “Safety and General
Information” section included in this guide.
When storing your battery, keep it
uncharged in a cool, dark, dry place.
essentials
install the battery
4.
1.
battery charging
2.
3.
10
essentials
New batteries are not
fully charged. Plug the
battery micro charger
into your phone and
an electrical outlet.
Your phone might take
several seconds to
start charging the battery. When the battery is
fully charged, the charging light turns off, and
the interior phone display shows N.
Tip: Relax, you can’t overcharge your battery.
It will perform best after you fully charge and
deplete it a few times.
You can also charge your battery by
connecting a cable from your
phone’s mini-USB port to a USB
port on a computer. Both your
phone and the computer must be turned on,
and your computer must have the correct
software drivers installed. Cables and
software drivers are available in Motorola
Original data kits, sold separately.
turn it on & off
To turn on your
phone, press
and hold O for a
few seconds or
until the display
turns on. If prompted, enter your four-digit
unlock code.
To turn off your phone, press and hold O
for two seconds.
make a call
Enter a phone number and press N to make
a call.
To “hang up,” close the phone or press O.
answer a call
When your phone rings and/or vibrates, open
the phone or press N to answer.
To “hang up,” close the phone or press O.
Power
Key
essentials
11
adjust volume
store a phone number
Press the volume keys (see page 1) up or
down to:
You can store a phone number in Contacts:
• increase or decrease earpiece volume
during a call
• increase or decrease the ringer volume
setting from the home screen
• turn off an incoming call alert
1 Enter a phone number in the home
screen.
2 Press Store.
3 Enter a name and other details for the
phone number. To select a highlighted
item, press the center key s.
4 Press Done to store the number.
change the call alert
With the phone open, press the down volume
key (see page 1) to switch to lower call alert
volume, then vibrate, and finally silent alert.
Press the up volume key to cycle back from
silent alert to vibrate and then to the lowest
alert volume setting.
12
essentials
To edit or delete a Contacts entry, see page 70.
To store an email address, press
s > n Contacts > [New Entry] > Email. Enter the
new entry’s name and email address
information.
call a stored phone
number
Find it: s > n Contacts
1 Scroll to the Contacts entry.
Shortcut: In Contacts, press keypad keys to
enter the first letters of an entry you want.
You can also press * and # to see the
entries you use frequently, or entries in
other categories.
2 Press N to call the entry.
view your phone
number
Find it: s > m Phone Status > My Tel. Number
Tip: Want to see your phone number while
you’re on a call? Press Options > My Tel. Number.
essentials
13
main attractions
You can do much more with your phone than
make and receive calls!
Find it: s w Settings > Airplane Mode
> Prompt At Startup > On or Off
airplane mode
MP3 music player
Note: Consult airline staff about the use of
Airplane Mode during flight. Turn off your phone
whenever instructed to do so by airline staff.
Use your phone’s MP3 music player to play
MP3 music files that you copy to your phone
or to an optional memory card (see page 33).
Airplane mode turns off your phone’s calling
features in situations where wireless phone
use is prohibited. You can use the phone’s
other non-calling features when Airplane Mode is
turned on.
If you have a memory card in your phone, the
music player uses it as its default storage
device for music. If you do not have a memory
card, the player uses phone memory.
Find it: s w Settings > Airplane Mode > On or Off
Your phone can prompt you to activate or
deactivate each time you turn on the phone:
14
main attractions
Note: You can use the Sounds option of the
Media Gallery menu (see page 86) to listen to
music files in formats other than MP3.
However, the Sounds option does not include all
of the capabilities of the MP3 music player.
load music
Your phone displays the My Music menu:
To copy music from a computer to your
memory card, see page 33.
My Music
Playlists
Recently Played
Artists
Albums
Songs
Genres
Some wireless providers offer services
that allow you to buy and download
music from a Web site. Contact your wireless
provider for more information.
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.
play music
To activate your phone’s MP3 music player:
Find it: s > h Media Gallery > MP3 Player
Press Options
to open
Options menu.
Options
Highlighted
Selection
Exit
Press Exit
to exit
MP3 player.
The MP3 player My Music menu includes:
option
Playlists
Recently Played
Artists
Create or play a playlist.
View & play songs you
played recently.
Find & play music by an
artist.
main attractions
15
option
Albums
Songs
Genres
16
Find & play music from a
specific album.
Find & play a song.
Note: All of your phone’s
songs are listed here. Some
songs do not have Artist,
Album, or Genre information, so
that information is not
included.
Find & play music from a
specific genre (type of
music) such as rock or jazz.
main attractions
While a song is playing, your phone’s screen
will look like this example:
All Songs
ne a Little Bit Closer.mp3
05 Come a Little Bit Clos. . .
Hello Moto.mp3
adrenaline
flawless
e a Little Bit Closer.mp
1:33
Options
4:49
Back
When lit, indicates
Replay turned on.
When lit,
indicates
Shuffle
turned on.
Use these keys to control the MP3 player:
controls
pause/play
Press & release the center
key s.
or
Press Options, then select
Pause to pause. Press Resume
to resume play
fast forward Press & hold S right (for
at least two seconds).
skip to next Press & release S right.
song
rewind
Press & hold S left (for at
least two seconds).
skip back to Within first two seconds of
previous
song, press &
release S left.
song
controls
return to
song
beginning
scroll up/
down
through list
turn off
music
player
After first two seconds of
song, press &
release S left.
Press S up or down.
Press Back until you return to
the My Music menu, then
press Exit.
or
Press O.
play music from a playlist
Play a playlist or song:
Find it: s > h Media Gallery > MP3 Player
> Playlists
main attractions
17
1 Scroll to the playlist you want and press
the center key s.
2 To play the entire playlist beginning with
the first song, press the center key s.
or
To play one song, scroll to the song you
want to play and press the center key s.
Scroll to a song and press the center key s.
find & play music by artist
Play an album or song:
Find it: s > h Media Gallery > MP3 Player
> Artists
Play all songs from all playlists:
1 Scroll to the artist you want and press the
center key s.
Find it: s > h Media Gallery > MP3 Player
> Playlists
2 Scroll to the album you want and press
the center key s.
1 Press Options.
3 To play the entire album beginning with
the first song, press the center key s.
2 Scroll to Play and press Select.
play music from the recently
played list
Find it: s > h Media Gallery > MP3 Player
> Recently Played
18
main attractions
or
To play one song, scroll to the song you
want to play and press the center key s.
Play all songs:
Find it: s > h Media Gallery > MP3 Player
> Artists
1 Scroll to the artist you want and press
Options.
1 Press Options.
2 Scroll to Play and press Select.
2 Scroll to Play and press Select.
find & play music by songs
find & play music by album
Play an album or song:
Find it: s > h Media Gallery > MP3 Player
> Songs
Find it: s > h Media Gallery > MP3 Player
> Albums
To play all songs beginning with the first song
on the list, press the center key s.
1 Scroll to the album you want and press
the center key s.
or
2 To play the entire album beginning with
the first song, press the center key s.
or
To play one song, scroll to the song you
want to play and press the center key s.
To play one song, scroll to the song you want
and press the center key s.
find & play music by genre
Play an album or song:
Play all songs on all albums:
Find it: s > h Media Gallery > MP3 Player
> Genres
Find it: s > h Media Gallery > MP3 Player
> Albums
1 Scroll to the genre you want and press the
center key s.
main attractions
19
2 Scroll to the artist you want and press the
center key s.
3 Scroll to the album you want and press
the center key s.
4 To play the entire album beginning with
the first song, press the center key s.
or
To play one song, scroll to the song you
want to play and press the center key s.
Play all songs in a genre:
Find it: s > h Media Gallery > MP3 Player
> Genres
replay, shuffle, & other options
Press Options while using the MP3 player to
open the Options menu:
option
Now Playing
Pause/Resume
Play
Song Details
Repeat
1 Scroll to the genre you want and press the
center key s.
2 Press Options.
3 Scroll to Play and press Select.
20
main attractions
Shuffle
View the name of the song
currently playing.
Pause/resume play.
Begin playing the current
selection.
View information about the
current selection.
Replay one song (when you
select a single song for
play—does not play a
playlist or album).
Play songs in random order.
option
Search?
wake up music player
Set whether the player
searches for new music on
the memory card when you
first activate the player:
Always—Search
automatically.
Ask—Prompt you to begin or
skip searching.
Never—Do not allow a search
when the player is activated.
Search for Songs? Search for new music on the
memory card at any time
while using the player.
About
View detailed information
about the MP3 music player.
While the music player is active, your phone
may conserve battery power by turning off the
display and keypad backlights (see page 59).
To turn display and lights back on, press
any key.
turn off music player
Press Back until you return to the My Music
menu, then press Exit.
or
Press O.
music player tips
• If you are navigating music player
menus while a song is playing and
don’t press a key for more than twenty
seconds, the player returns to the
current song list screen.
main attractions
21
• Turn off the player before connecting
the phone to a computer. If you
connect the phone to a computer while
the player is turned on, the phone
automatically turns off the player.
• If you receive a call while playing
music, the music is paused. Playing
resumes when you end the call.
• If you use a headset with the
phone while using the music
player, the music plays through the
headset. Music plays through the
phone speaker when the headset is
disconnected.
create & manage playlists
Personalize your music collection by creating
your own playlists.
When you name a playlist:
22
main attractions
• The name must be all lowercase
characters.
• The name must be fewer than 32
characters.
• The name cannot include these
characters:
/\:*?<>|"!
Create a playlist:
Find it: s > h Media Gallery > MP3 Player
> Playlists > [Create New Playlist]
1 Enter a name for the playlist and press Ok.
2 Scroll to a desired song and press the
center key s.
When you select a song, a \ appears
beside the song. (To unselect a song,
scroll to the song and press the center
key s again.)
Repeat this step until you have selected
all songs you want to add to the playlist.
2 Scroll to Reorder Playlist and press the center
key s.
3 Press Done when you have finished adding
songs.
3 Scroll to the song whose position you
want to change press Grab.
Edit a playlist:
Find it: s > h Media Gallery > MP3 Player
> Playlists
4 Scroll to the position in the playlist where
you want to move the song, and press
Insert.
1 Scroll to a desired playlist and press
Options.
5 Repeat these steps until you have
reordered the playlist as you prefer.
2 Scroll to Edit Playlist and press the center
key s.
6 Press Done to return to the Playlists menu.
3 Follow the steps for creating a playlist in
the previous section.
Find it: s > h Media Gallery > MP3 Player
> Playlists
Reorder a playlist:
1 Scroll to a desired playlist and press
Options.
Find it: s > h Media Gallery > MP3 Player
> Playlists
1 Scroll to Options and press the center
key s.
Delete a playlist:
2 Scroll to Delete Playlist and press the center
key s.
main attractions
23
3 When prompted to confirm the deletion,
press Yes.
The active video camera viewfinder image
appears on your phone’s screen:
Remaining
Video Minutes
record & play video
clips
28
You can record a video clip with your phone
and send it in a multimedia message to other
wireless phone users.
Your camera lens is on the back of your phone
when the phone is open (see page 1). To get
the clearest video clips, wipe the lens
clean with a dry cloth before you capture a
video clip.
record a clip
To activate your phone’s video camera:
Find it: s > h Media Gallery > Video Camera
24
main attractions
Storage
(Phone or
Memory
Card)
Lighting Conditions
480x640
Indoor (Home)
Options
Press left soft key to
view Options menu.
Exit
Press right soft key to
return to previous screen.
1 Point the camera lens at the video
subject.
Press S left and right to specify lighting
conditions (Automatic, Sunny, Cloudy, Indoor
(Home), Indoor (Office), or Night.
Press Options to view and select other
options (see the next section).
2 Press b to begin recording.
3 Press Stop to stop recording.
4 Press Options, then select Store Only to save
the video clip or Discard to discard the clip.
or
Press Send to save the video clip and go to
the Send Options screen. Then select Send in
Message or Send to Online Album.
adjust video camera settings
When the video camera is active, press Options
to view and select these options:
option
Go To
Videos
option
Go To
Photo
Mode
Flash On
Video
Camera
Setup
Switch
Storage
Device
Free Space
Switch to the still photo camera
viewfinder.
Set a light to turn on when you
record a video clip.
Change Video Length or Recording
Sound.
Specify where you want to save
video clips (phone memory or
memory card).
See how much memory remains
for storing video clips.
change screen orientation
View video clips stored on your
phone.
To change the screen orientation on your
phone so you can hold it sideways like a
camera:
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Find it: s > h Media Gallery > Videos
Scroll to the clip you want to view and press
the center key s.
clean with a dry cloth before you capture a
video clip.
take & send photo
play video clip
To activate your phone’s camera:
To play a video clip stored on your phone:
Find it: s h Media Gallery > Camera
Find it: s > h Media Gallery > Videos
Your phone displays the active viewfinder
image:
Scroll to the clip you want to view and press
the center key s.
621N
ß
take & send photo
You can take a photo with your phone and
sent it in a multimedia message to other
wireless phone users.
Your camera lens is on the back of your phone
when the phone is open (see page 1). To get
the clearest video clips, wipe the lens
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Displays when
you press S to
change photo
settings.
Zoom
1x
Options
Press left soft
key to view
Options menu.
480x640
Exit
Press right soft
key to return to
previous screen.
1 Point the camera lens at the camera
subject.
Press S up and down to select and
adjust one of the following settings:
Zoom—Increase or decrease image size.
Style—Set to Color, Black and White, Antique, or
Negative.
Lighting Conditions—Set to Automatic, Sunny,
Cloudy, Indoor (Home), Indoor (Office), or Night.
To view other options, press Options (see
page 28).
2 Use the two-stage shutter release key
to take the photo using the auto focus
feature (see page 27).
3 Press Options, then select Store Only to save
the photo, Discard to discard the photo, or
Print to print the photo using a Bluetooth
connection.
or
Press Send to save the photo and go to the
Send Options screen. Then select Send in
Message or Send to Online Album.
Tip: To take a self-portrait, activate the
camera, point the lens at yourself, and press
b. (Hold the camera at least 18 inches
away.)
auto focus
Your phone is equipped with an auto focus
lens and a two-stage shutter release key (see
page 1). Use these features to take the
highest quality photos.
Note: You can disable the auto focus feature
from the Camera Setup option of the camera
Options menu (see page 27).
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To use the auto focus feature:
1 When you are ready to take a photo, press
b halfway to activate the auto focus
feature.
option
Flash On
While the lens is focusing, the focus
bracket flashes in the viewfinder window.
When focus is locked, the bracket stops
flashing and your phone plays a tone.
2 To take the photo, fully press b.
Auto-Timed
Capture
Camera Setup
adjust camera settings
When the camera is active, press Options to
view and select these options:
option
Go To Pictures
Go To Video
Mode
28
View pictures and photos
stored on your phone.
Switch to the video camera
viewfinder.
main attractions
Switch Storage
Device
Free Space
Set camera light for photos
taken in settings with low
light. When Flash is set to
On, the lightning bolt icon in
the viewfinder window (see
page 26) turns yellow.
Set a timer for the camera
to take a photo.
Change Resolution or image
Quality, activate a Shutter Tone,
or turn Auto-Focus on or off.
Store photos in phone
memory or on an
optional memory card
(see page 33).
See how much memory
remains for storing pictures.
option
Capture Title
Find it: s > e > Messaging > Create Message
Assign a name to a captured
photo.
send a multimedia
message
A multimedia message contains embedded
media objects (possibly including photos,
pictures, animations, sounds, and voice
records). You can send a multimedia message
to other wireless phones with multimedia
messaging capabilities and to email
addresses.
create & send message
Note: You can send the message after
entering a recipient phone number or email
address and the message text. You do not
need to complete the other entry fields.
1 Enter message text.
Press Options to view mms message
options.
Note: See “mms message options” on
page 31 for descriptions of all menu
options.
2 Scroll to Insert and press Select.
3 To insert a stored multimedia object, scroll
to Picture, Voice Record, Sound, or Video, and
press Select. Then scroll to the desired
object and press Insert.
or
To take and insert a new photo, scroll to
New Picture and press Select. Then take the
photo and press Insert.
or
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To record and insert a new video clip,
scroll to New Video and press Select. Then
record the video clip and press Insert.
4 Press Send To.
5 Scroll to and select the entry to receive
the message.
Press Options to open the Send To MMS menu,
which can include these options:
options
Unselect All
or
View Selected
Press Options to open the Send To MMS menu,
then select Enter Number and enter the
recipient’s phone number, or select Enter
Email and enter the recipient’s email
address. Press Ok when finished.
Back to Message
Enter Number
6 Press SEND to send the message.
Enter Email
or
Change to MMS
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Unselect all recipient phone
numbers and/or email
addresses.
See a list of all recipient
phone numbers and/or
email addresses.
Return to the message text
entry screen.
Enter a recipient phone
number.
Enter a recipient email
address.
Change a text-only message
type to a multimedia
message.
options
Sending Options
Message Details
Save to Drafts
Cancel Message
Copy other recipients, enter
a message subject, add
attachments, set message
priority, or request a
message delivery report.
View detailed information
about the message.
Save the message to the
Drafts folder.
Cancel the message and
return to the Message Center.
options
Change to MMS
Change to SMS
Preview
Sending Options
mms message options
While creating a multimedia message, press
Options to open the MMS Menu:
options
Insert
Page Options
Change a text-only message
type to a multimedia
message.
Change a multimedia
message type to a text
message.
See the message and see or
listen to inserted multimedia
objects.
Copy other recipients, enter
a message subject, add
attachments, set message
priority, or request a
message delivery report.
Specify how long each
multimedia object is
displayed.
Insert a multimedia object.
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options
Message Details
View detailed information
about the message.
Save as Template Save the message as a text
message template or MMS
message template (see
page 72).
Cancel Message Cancel the message and
return to the Message Center.
Editing Options
Select Copy Text, Cut Text, or
Copy All Text.
Change Text
Select a text entry mode
Mode #
(see page 46).
Text Setup
Specify default primary and
secondary entry modes (see
page 46).
receive a multimedia
message
When you receive a multimedia message,
your phone plays an alert and displays the <
(message waiting) indicator and a New Message
notification.
Open the phone and press Read to read the
message immediately, or save it in your
Message Inbox for viewing later.
To read messages in your Message Inbox:
Find it: s > e Messaging > Message Inbox
1 Scroll to the message you want to read.
2 Press the center key s to open the
message. Your phone displays the media
object, then the message.
Multimedia messages can contain different
media objects:
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• Photos, pictures, and animations are
displayed when you read the message.
• A sound file begins playing when the
message text is displayed. Use the
volume keys to adjust the volume.
Note: You may have to select an
indicator embedded in the message
text to play a sound file.
If the message includes an attached file,
select the file indicator or filename and press
View (for an image file), Play (for a sound file), or
Open (for an object such as a Contacts or
datebook entry or an unknown file type).
memory card
You can store multimedia content such as
songs and photos on your phone’s internal
memory or on a removable microSD
(TransFlash) memory card.
Note: If you download a copyrighted file and
store it on your memory card, you can use the
file only when your memory card is inserted in
your phone. You cannot send, copy, or change
copyrighted files.
install memory card
1 With your phone
off, press the
battery door
latch and
remove the
battery door.
2 Remove the battery.
3 Slide the
memory card
into the card slot
as shown. Be
sure the card is
fully inserted.
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33
4 Replace the battery and the battery door.
2 Scroll to Format and press Select.
Do not remove your memory card while your
phone is using it or writing files on it.
3 When prompted, press Yes to continue or
No to cancel formatting.
format memory card
view memory card contents
Note: You must format a memory card before
using it for the first time. This procedure is
critical because it creates the “Mobile” and
“Motorola” directories that are used by your
phone. If you do not format a memory card
before using it for the first time, your phone
may not be able to read the contents of the
card.
Find it: Press s h Media Gallery
Caution: Formatting the memory card will
erase all content currently stored on the card.
4 Scroll to All (to view contents of the
memory card AND phone memory), Phone
Memory, or Memory Card, and press the center
key s.
Find it: Press s > m Phone Status
> Storage Devices
Find it:
1 Scroll to Memory Card-T-Flash and press Options.
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1 Scroll to and select the desired
multimedia object type (Pictures, Sounds, or
Videos).
2 Press Options to open the menu for the
selected object type.
3 Scroll to View Storage Devices and press Select.
copy or move files between
phone & memory card
5 Press Options, then scroll to Manage Marked
Files and press S right.
You can copy or move files (such as photos or
music files) from your phone to the memory
card to free up phone memory.
6 Scroll to Copy or Move and press Select.
Note: Moving a file to the memory card
deletes the original from phone memory.
Find it: Press s h Media Gallery
1 Scroll to Pictures or Videos and press Select.
Note: Pictures that came preloaded on
your phone cannot be moved to the
memory card.
2 Scroll to the picture or video clip you want
to move or copy and press Options.
3 Scroll to Mark and press S right.
4 Scroll to Current (to mark the selected file)
or All (to mark all files) and press Select.
7 Scroll to the device where you want to
copy or move the file and press the center
key s.
transfer files from a computer
to your memory card
Note: You must format a memory card (see
page 34) before using it for the first time. This
procedure is critical.
You can transfer files from a computer to your
phone’s memory card with a cable connection
or by using a card reader.
cable connection
You can use a cable connection (see page 39)
to transfer files from a computer to a memory
card installed in your phone.
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Note: When your phone is connected to a
computer, you cannot access the memory
card through the phone.
Disconnect the cable from your phone, if it
is connected. Then, on your phone:
Find it: Press s > w Settings > Connection
> USB Settings
1 With Default highlighted, press Change.
2 Scroll to USB Drive and press Select.
3 Press O to return to the home screen.
Connect the cable to your phone and to an
available USB port on your computer. Then,
on your computer:
1 Open your “My Computer” window,
where your phone’s memory card displays
as a “Removable Disk” icon.
2 Click on the “Removable Disk” icon to
access your phone’s memory card.
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main attractions
3 In the “Removable Disk” (memory card)
window, create one or more folders for
the files you will copy onto the memory
card.
You can save up to 50 files in each folder
that you create. When the MP3 music
player looks for music files on the card, it
will search all folders on the card if the
Search option is set to Always or Ask (see
page 21).
A file name (including the path) must be
less than 53 characters. For example, if
you copy songs into a folder you create
that is named “MyMotoSongs,” the name
of any song PLUS the name of the folder
“MyMotoSongs” must be less than 53
characters.
Note: You may see “Mobile” and
“Motorola” folders in the memory card
window. These folders are used by your
phone. Do not delete these folders.
4 Copy desired files onto the memory card
by dragging and dropping them into the
“Removable Disk” window, into a folder
that you have created.
Do not copy files to the main directory
(where the “Mobile” and “Motorola”
folders are located).
5 When you finish, disconnect your phone
by clicking on the “Safely Remove
Hardware” icon in the system tray on your
computer screen, then selecting “Safely
Remove USB Mass Storage Device.”
6 Disconnect the cable from your phone
and computer.
memory card reader
1 Insert your memory card into the card
reader.
Note: You may first need to insert the
card into an adapter that fits into the card
reader.
2 Insert the card reader into and available
USB port on your computer.
3 Open your “My Computer” window on
your computer, where your phone’s
memory card shows as a “Removable
Disk” icon.
4 Click on the “Removable Disk” icon to
access your phone’s memory card.
5 In the “Removable Disk” (memory card)
window, create one or more folders for
the files you will copy onto the memory
card.
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You can save up to 50 files in each folder
that you create. When the MP3 music
player looks for music files on the card, it
will search all folders on the card if the
Search option is set to Always or Ask (see
page 21).
A file name (including the path) must be
less than 53 characters. For example, if
you copy songs into a folder you create
that is named “MyMotoSongs,” the name
of any song PLUS the name of the folder
“MyMotoSongs” must be less than 53
characters.
Note: You may see “Mobile” and
“Motorola” folders in the memory card
window. These folders are used by your
phone. Do not delete these folders.
6 Copy desired files onto the memory card
by dragging and dropping them into the
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“Removable Disk” window, into a folder
that you have created.
Do not copy files to the main directory
(where the “Mobile” and “Motorola”
folders are located).
7 When you finish, disconnect the card
reader by clicking on the “Safely Remove
Hardware” icon in the system tray on your
computer screen, then selecting “Safely
Remove USB Mass Storage Device.”
8 Remove the card reader from the
computer.
9 If necessary, remove the memory card
from the adapter.
10 Insert the memory card into your phone
(see page 33).
cable connections
Your phone has a mini-USB port so you can
connect it to a computer.
If you use a USB cable connection:
• You must use Motorola Original™ USB
data cables and supporting software
which are sold separately.
• Make sure to connect the phone to a
high-power USB port on your computer
(not a low-power one such as the USB
port on your keyboard or bus-powered
USB hub). Typically, USB high-power
ports are located directly on your
computer.
Note: If you connect your phone to a
low-power USB port, the computer
may not recognize your phone.
• Make sure both your phone and the
computer are turned on.
Bluetooth®
connections
Your phone supports Bluetooth wireless
connections. You can connect your phone to a
Bluetooth headset or car kit, or connect to
another device to transfer files.
Your phone currently supports the following
Bluetooth profiles:
• headset (optional Motorola Original™
accessory)
• Handsfree Car Kit (optional Motorola
Original accessory)
For more Bluetooth wireless connections
support, go to www.motorola.com/
Bluetoothsupport.
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39
Note: All multimedia (video player, audio
player, shutter tones) will play from the
speakerphone when your phone is connected
to another Bluetooth device.
turn Bluetooth power on/off
Set Bluetooth power to be on whenever your
phone is on.
Find it: s > w Settings > Connection
> Bluetooth Link > Setup
1 Scroll to Power and press Change.
2 Scroll to On and press Select.
Note: To extend battery life, use the above
procedure and set Bluetooth power to Off
when not in use. If you turn Bluetooth power
Off, your phone will not connect to accessories
until you turn Bluetooth power On and
reconnect to the accessories.
40
main attractions
pair with headset, handsfree
device, or computer
Before you try to connect to another
Bluetooth device, make sure your phone’s
Bluetooth power is On and the device is in
pairing mode (see the user guide for the
device you are attempting to pair with). You
cannot perform pairing while your phone is
connected to another device.
To pair your phone to a headset accessory,
handsfree car kit, or PC that supports
Bluetooth wireless connections:
Find it: s > w Settings > Connection
> Bluetooth Link > Audio Devices > [Look For Devices]
Your phone displays a list of devices located
within range of the phone. If your phone is
already connected to a device, your phone
lists that device and identifies it with a %
(in-use indicator). After a connection is
established with a device, no other device can
connect to your phone until the currently
connected device is disconnected.
1 Highlight a device in the list of devices
your phone found.
2 Press the center key s to connect the
device.
3 If the device requests permission to bond
with your phone, select YES and enter the
device PIN code to create a secure
connection with the device.
Note: The default PIN code is 0000.
When the connection is made, the à
(Bluetooth) indicator or a Bluetooth message
displays in the home screen.
Tip: For specific information about an
accessory, refer to the instructions that came
with it.
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41
basics
See page 1 for a basic phone diagram.
Soft key labels show the current soft key
functions. For soft key locations, see page 1.
home screen
Your phone displays system status indicators
at the top of the home screen:
Coverage
Îì
Signal
Strength
3O\
WED 11/29/06
Left Soft Key
Label
42
Recent
basics
ruõ ì
WED 8/23/06
Note: Your home screen might look different.
Message
Roam
The home screen shows when you turn on
the phone. To dial a number from the home
screen, press number keys and N.
Recent
L&
10:51am
Phonebook
Right Soft Key
Label
Battery
Level
Ring Alert
L&
10:51am
Phonebook
AGPS
Service
system status indicators
indicator
6 Signal
Strength
W Roaming
/ Digital
I 1X
× Missed
Call
Vertical bars show the
strength of the network
connection.
Indicates phone is in a
digital coverage area and is
roaming off network.
Indicates phone is in a
CDMA digital coverage
area.
Indicates phone is in a
1x-RTT coverage area.
Indicates that you received
an unanswered call.
indicator
+ Data
Call,
Tethered, or
Embedded
WAP/BREW
Application
÷ No
Service
h Voice
Call/
Incoming
Call
P E911
O Location
On
9 Phone
Locked
Shows during data call,
tethered mode, or WAP/
BREW application.
Phone is in area with no
service coverage.
Shows during an active
voice call.
Shows when E911 is On.
Shows when Location is set to
On.
Shows when phone is
locked.
basics
43
indicator
ì
Battery
Level
õ Sounds
Loud
ô Sounds
Soft
ô Sounds
Soft
Î All
Sounds Off
Ì Sound
On, Vibrate
On
Speakerphone On
44
basics
Shows battery charge level.
The more bars, the greater
the charge.
Indicates Style (in Ring Styles) is
set to Loud.
Indicates Style (in Ring Styles) is
set to Soft.
Indicates Style (in Ring Styles) is
set to Silent.
Indicates Style (in Ring Styles) is
set to Vibe then Ring.
Indicates speakerphone is
on.
indicator
Q New
Text
Message
t New
Voicemail
Message
Airplane
Mode
Displays when you receive a
new text message.
Displays when you receive a
new voicemail message.
Shows when Airplane Mode is
turned on. (You cannot
make or answer calls, but
you can use other
non-calling features of your
phone.
E Bluetooth Your phone is paired to
Connection another Bluetooth® device.
Active
menu shortcuts
Your phone includes shortcuts to give you
quick access to menu features.
select home screen menu icon
Your phone displays four menu icons in the
middle of the home screen.
Îì
select by number
You can set your phone to display the menu
as a numbered list of features (see “menu
view” on page 77). When the menu is a
numbered list, press the center key s, then
the number key associated with the menu
feature.
WED 11/29/06
display icons in the home screen (see
page 77).
Recent
L&
10:51am
Phonebook
Press S left, right, up, or down to open the
menu for the corresponding icon.
You can change the menu icons that appear in
the home screen or set your phone not to
basics
45
enter text
This example shows a screen for writing a
message:
Some features require you to enter
information. This example shows a screen for
entering information for a Contacts entry:
Press Done
to save
all changes.
Îì
450
Îì
Entry Details
Name: John Smith
No.: 2125551212
Type: Mobile
Speed No.: 6
Category: General
Ringer ID: None
Done
ÂÆ Msg
Highlighted
Option
Cancel
Press Cancel
to exit
without
making
changes.
Press Options
to view
Message Menu.
Options
Cancel
set entry modes
Multiple text entry modes make it easy for
you to enter names, numbers, and messages:
entry mode
Primary
Enter text using the method you
set (see page 46).
Numeric
Enter numbers only (see
page 51).
46
basics
entry mode
Symbol
Enter symbols only (see page 51).
Secondary Enter text using the method you
set (see page 46).
To set up Primary or Secondary entry
mode:
1 Press Options in any text entry screen.
2 Scroll to Entry Setup and press Select.
3 Scroll to Primary Setup or Secondary Setup and
press Change.
4 Scroll to one of the methods in the table
following these steps and press Select.
You can select one of these text entry
methods:
entry method
iTAP
Let the phone predict each
English
English word as you press keys
(see page 46).
iTAP
Let the phone predict each
Español
Spanish word as you press keys.
iTAP
Let the phone predict each
Portuguêse Portuguese word as you press
keys.
Tap
Enter letters and numbers by
pressing a key one or more
times.
Tap
Enter letters, numbers, and
Extended
symbols by pressing a key one or
more times.
basics
47
Your phone may not contain all of the
languages listed above.
When you select Primary or Secondary entry
mode, the phone will now use the method
you just set up.
text entry mode indicators
When you select the Primary or Secondary text
entry mode, the following indicators identify
the text entry setting:
To select a text entry mode:
primary
Press Options in any text entry screen, scroll to
and select Entry Mode, then scroll to and select
the desired entry mode.
capitalization
Press 0 in any text entry screen to change
text case. The following indicators show
capitalization status:
capitalization status
no capital letters
Á
á
all capital letters
Â
capitalize next letter only
48
basics
secondary
Tap, no capital
letters
Tap, capitalize
next letter only
Tap, all capital
letters
iTAP™, no
capital letters
iTAP, capitalize
next letter only
iTAP, all capital
letters
The following indicators identify Numeric or
Symbol entry mode:
non-text entry mode
numeric mode
Ã
Ä
symbol mode
tap method
This is the standard method for entering text
on your phone.
Tip: Press S right or # to insert a space.
In a text entry screen you can press * to
switch entry modes. If Tap or Tap Extended is not
available as the Primary or Secondary entry mode,
see page “set entry modes” on page 46.
When you enter three or more characters in a
row, your phone may guess the rest of the
word. For example, if you enter prog, you might
see:
Îì
ÁÔ Msg
Regular Tap method cycles through the letters
and numbers of the key you press. The Tap
Extended method cycles through letters,
numbers, and symbols.
1 Press a key one or more times to select a
letter, number, or symbol.
2 Repeat the step above to enter all
characters.
436
This is a prog ram
Recent
Press S right
to accept Program , or
press S up or
down to reject it.
Press # to enter
a space after prog .
Phonebook
If you want a different word, continue
pressing keys to enter the remaining
characters.
basics
49
• Press a keypad key repeatedly to cycle
through its characters.
1 Press keypad keys to show possible letter
combinations at the bottom of the screen.
• Press S left or right to move the
flashing cursor to the left or right in a
text message.
2 Scroll left or right to highlight the
combination you want.
• 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.
• If you don’t want to save your text or
text edits, press O to exit without
saving.
iTAP® method
The iTAP software combines your key presses
into common words, and predicts each word
as you enter it. This can be faster than Tap
method.
50
basics
3 Press Select to lock a highlighted
combination.
You can press keys to add more letters to
the end of the combination.
or
Press * to enter the highlighted
combination when it spells a word.
A space is inserted after the word.
For example, if you press 7764, your
phone displays the corresponding letter
combinations:
Îì
ÁÛ Msg
433
Press S up
to accept
program.
This is a prog ram
Press Select
to lock
highlighted
combination.
prog proh proi pro4
Select
Delete
Press S right
to select
another
combination.
Press Delete
to delete
last letter.
If you enter a word your phone does not
recognize, your phone stores the word to use
as a future word option. When you run out of
phone memory for unrecognized words, your
phone deletes the oldest word to add new
words.
numeric method
In a text entry screen, press * to switch
entry methods until your phone displays the
à (numeric) indicator.
Press keypad keys to enter the numbers you
want. When you finish entering numbers,
press * to switch to another entry method.
symbol method
In a text entry screen, press * to switch
entry methods until your phone displays the
Ä (numeric) indicator.
1 Press a key one or more times to show
possible symbol combinations at the
bottom of the screen.
2 Scroll left or right to highlight the symbol
you want.
3 Press Select to enter the highlighted
symbol.
basics
51
delete letters & words
Place the cursor to the right of the text you
want to delete and then:
• Press B to delete one letter at a time.
• Press and hold B to delete the entire
message.
external display
When you close your phone, you can use the
external display for the following:
• View time and phone status
information.
• Set phone alert styles.
• View message notifications.
To set the phone alert style using the
external display:
1 Press the volume keys up or down to
scroll through styles.
2 Press the smart/speakerphone key to
select the displayed style.
3 Press the volume keys up or down to
return to the home screen.
To view an missed call when you see X
Missed Calls in the external display:
Note: Because the microphone and earpiece
are unavailable when the phone is closed, you
must use a headset or other handsfree device
with this feature.
1 Press the smart/speakerphone key to
view the received calls list.
2 Press the volume keys up or down to
scroll through and select a call.
52
basics
3 Press the smart/speakerphone key to
view the selected call.
To end the call, press End Call or press the O
key.
handsfree speaker
Note: Closing the phone while using the
speakerphone does not end the call.
You can use your phone’s handsfree speaker
to make calls without holding the phone to
your ear.
Note: The handsfree speaker won’t work
when your phone is connected to a handsfree
car kit or headset.
To activate the
speakerphone
during a call, press
and hold the smart/
speakerphone key.
You will see
Speakerphone On and
hear a soft audio
alert.
The handsfree speaker stays on until you
press and hold the smart/speakerphone key
again or turn off the phone. You will see
Speakerphone Off.
You can also set your phone to turn off the
speakerphone automatically after twenty
seconds of inactivity:
Find it: s > w Settings > Initial Setup
1 Scroll to SpeakerPhone and press Change.
2 Scroll to 20 sec timeout and press Select.
To use the speakerphone with your phone
closed:
1 Open the phone.
basics
53
2 Press and hold the smart/speakerphone
key to turn on the speakerphone.
3 Enter then number you want to call and
press N.
4 When the call connects, close the phone
and continue your conversation.
If your service provider didn’t change these
codes, you should change them to prevent
others from accessing your personal
information. The unlock code must contain
four digits. The security code must contain six
digits.
To change a code or password:
5 To end the call, press and hold the smart/
speakerphone key. You will see Call Ended
and hear a soft audio alert.
Find it: s > w Settings > Security
> New Passwords
codes & 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:
Your phone’s four-digit unlock code is
originally set to 1234 or to the last four digits
of your phone number. The six-digit security
code is originally set to 000000. Your service
provider may reset these codes before you
get your phone.
54
basics
If you forget your security code, 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.
Note: You can make emergency calls on a
locked phone (see page 64). A locked phone
still rings or vibrates for incoming calls or
messages, but you need to unlock it to
answer.
To lock your phone:
Find it: Press s > w Settings > Security
> Phone Lock > Lock Now or Automatic Lock
Enter the four-digit unlock code, then press Ok.
To unlock your phone:
When you see Enter Unlock Code, enter your
four-digit unlock code and press Ok.
basics
55
customize
ring styles & alerts
set alerts
Your phone rings and/or vibrates to notify you
of an incoming call or to signal certain other
events. This ring or vibration is called an alert.
Your phone includes alerts for Calls, Inbox,
Voicemail, Alarms, Data Calls, Fax Calls, and Reminders.
set a style
Find it: s > w Settings > Ring Styles
Tip: You can also press s > w Settings
>Personalize > Sound Settings > Ring Styles
1 Scroll to Style and press Change or the center
key s.
2 Scroll to the desired ring style and press
Select or the center key s.
56
customize
You can specify a detailed setting for each
type of alert:
Find it: s > w Settings > Ring Styles
1 Scroll to Style Detail and press Change or the
center key s.
2 Scroll to the desired alert type and press
Change or the center key s.
3 Scroll to the desired detail setting and
press Select or the center key s.
Note: Your phone plays a sample of each
highlighted setting as you scroll through
the settings.
answer options
You can use different ways to answer an
incoming call.
options
Multi-Key
Open To Answer
wallpaper
Set a photo, picture, or animation as a
wallpaper (background) image in your home
screen.
Note: Your theme can set your wallpaper
(page 59).
s > w Settings > Personalize > Wallpaper
To select a wallpaper image:
1 Scroll to Picture and press Change or the
center key s.
Answer by pressing any key.
Answer by opening the
phone.
2 Scroll to the picture you want and press
the center key s.
Select (None) to turn off wallpaper.
To turn on or turn off an answer option:
To adjust wallpaper image layout:
Find it: s > w Settings > In-Call Setup
> Answer Options
1 Scroll to Layout and press Change or the
center key s.
customize
57
2 Scroll to Center, Tile, or Fit-to-screen, and press
Select or the center key s.
Find it: s > w Settings > Personalize
> Screen Saver
To set a monthly calendar as your
wallpaper:
To select a picture to use as a screen saver:
1 Scroll to Calendar and press Change or the
center key s.
2 Scroll to On and press Select or the center
key s.
1 Scroll to Picture and press Change or the
center key s to view available pictures.
2 Scroll to the picture you want and press
Select or the center key s.
Select (None) to turn off the screen saver.
set screen saver
To specify how long your phone must be
inactive before it displays the screen saver:
Set a photo or picture as a screen saver
image.
1 Scroll to Delay and press Change.
The screen saver image displays when the
phone is open and no activity is detected for a
specified time period. The image shrinks to fill
the display, if necessary.
Tip: To extend battery life, turn off the screen
saver.
58
customize
2 Scroll to 1 minute, 2 minutes, 5 minutes, or 10
minutes, and press Select.
brightness
Find it: s > w Settings > Initial Setup
> Display Timeout
display timeout
Set the amount of time that the display and
keypad backlights remain on, or turn off
backlights to extend battery life.
Find it: s > w Settings > Initial Setup
> Display Timeout
backlight
Set the amount of time that the display
and keypad backlights remain on, or turn
off backlights to extend battery life.
Find it: s > w Settings > Initial Setup > Backlight
talking phone settings
You can set your phone to speak aloud the
name of a Contacts entry when you highlight
that entry in the phonebook. You can also set
it to speak the names of digits as you enter a
number to call.
To set up the talking phone feature:
Find it: s > w Settings > Personalize
> Sound Settings > Talking Phone Settings
Select Contact List Entries or Keypad Digits and press
Change, then select On or Off.
To activate the talking phone feature:
Find it: s > w Settings > Personalize
> Sound Settings > Talking Phone > On
AGPS & your location
Note: This Motorola mobile phone
incorporates Assisted Global Positioning
System (AGPS) technology that can be used
by emergency services to help determine a
user’s location. This functionality is required
by law and cannot be deactivated. However,
customize
59
AGPS technology also can be used with
certain location-based software
applications—for example, to provide driving
directions—which may track and monitor a
user’s location. Users who prefer not to
permit such tracking and monitoring should
avoid using such applications.
network or a service asks for your location.
You can refuse at this point.
Your phone uses the Automatic Location
Information (ALI) feature, along with AGPS
satellite signals, to tell the network where you
are physically located.
Find it: s > w Settings > Location > On or Off
Note: ALI may not work in all locations and
may not be available due to network,
environmental, or interference issues.
When ALI is set to Location > On, your phone
shows the O (ALI on) indicator. Services
may use your known location to provide
useful information (for example, driving
directions, or the location of the nearest
bank). Your phone prompts you when the
60
customize
When ALI is set to Location > Off, your phone
displays the P (ALI off) indicator, and the
phone does not send location information
unless you call the emergency phone number
(such as 911).
To view or change the location transmission
status of your phone during a call, press
s > Location.
AGPS limitations & tips
Your phone uses Assisted Global
Positioning System (AGPS) satellite
signals to estimate your location. If your
phone cannot find strong satellite signals,
your AGPS might be slower, less accurate, or
it might not work at all. AGPS provides only an
approximate location, often within 150 feet
(45 meters) but sometimes much farther from
your actual location.
To improve AGPS accuracy:
• Go outside and away from
underground locations, covered
vehicles, structures with metal or
concrete roofs, tall buildings, and
foliage. Indoor performance might
improve if you move closer to
windows, but some window sun
shielding films can block satellite
signals.
• Hold your phone away from your body,
and point the phone antenna toward
the sky. Do not cover the antenna area
with your fingers
AGPS uses satellites controlled by the U.S.
government and subject to changes
implemented in accordance with the
Department of Defense AGPS user policy and
the Federal Radio Navigation Plan. These
changes might affect AGPS performance.
• Move away from radios, entertainment
equipment, and other electronic
devices that might interfere with or
block AGPS satellite signals.
• If your phone has a retractable
antenna, extend the antenna.
customize
61
calls
To make and answer calls, see page 11.
turn off a call alert
You can press the volume keys to turn off a
call alert before answering the call.
redial a number
1 Press N from the home screen.
2 Scroll to the entry you want to call and
press N.
automatic redial
When you receive a busy signal, your
phone displays Call Failed, Number Busy.
62
calls
When you set Auto Redial to On, your phone
automatically redials a busy number for four
minutes. When the call connects, your phone
rings or vibrates once, displays Redial Successful,
and completes the call.
Find it: s > w > Settings > Initial Setup
> Auto Redial
When automatic redial is turned off, you can
manually activate the feature to redial a phone
number. When you hear a fast busy signal and
see Call Failed, press N or RETRY.
recent calls
Your phone keeps lists of the calls you
recently received and dialed, even if the calls
didn’t connect. The lists are sorted from
newest to oldest calls. The oldest calls are
deleted as new calls are added.
Tip: Press N from the home screen to view
the dialed calls list.
Find it: s > É Recent Calls
When you press Options while viewing a list of
recent calls, you see a menu that can include
these options:
option
Store
1 Scroll to Recent Calls or Dialed Calls and press
Select.
2 Scroll to an entry.
Note: A % next to a call means the call
connected.
3 Press N to call the number.
Delete
Delete All
Send Message
To see call details (like time and date),
press the center key s.
To access a menu of options (see the
table following these steps), press Options.
Add Digits
Attach Number
Create a Contacts entry
with the number in the
Number field. Store does not
appear if the number is
already in your Contacts.
Delete the entry.
Delete all entries in the list.
Open a new text message
with the number in the To
field.
Add digits after the number.
Attach a number from the
Contacts or recent calls lists.
calls
63
return a missed call
Your phone keeps a record of your missed
calls, and shows X Missed Calls, where X is the
number of missed calls.
1 Press the View key to see the Received Calls
list.
2 Scroll to the call you want to return, then
press N.
notepad
The most recent set of digits that you enter
are stored in your phone/s notepad memory.
These digits can be a number that you called
ar a number that you entered and want to
save for later.
To retrieve a number stored in the notepad:
Find it: s > É Recent Calls > Notepad
Press N to call the number.
Press Options to open the Options menu to attach
a number or insert a special character.
Press Store to create a Contacts entry with the
number in the Number field.
attach number
While dialing (with digits visible on the
screen), press s > Attach Number to attach a
number from the phone book or a recent calls
list.
emergency calls
Your service provider programs emergency
phone numbers, such as 911 or 112, that you
can call under any circumstances, even when
your phone is locked.
1 Enter the emergency number.
64
calls
2 Press N .
Note: Emergency numbers vary by country.
Your phone’s 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.
AGPS during an
emergency call
When you make an emergency call,
your phone can use Assisted Global
Positioning System (AGPS) satellite signals to
tell the emergency response center your
approximate location.
The AGPS feature has limitations, so always
tell the emergency response center your best
knowledge of your location. Remain on the
phone for as long as the emergency response
center instructs you.
AGPS might not work for emergency calls:
• Your phone’s AGPS feature must be
turned on (see page 59).
• Your local emergency response center
might not process AGPS location
information. For details, contact your
local authorities.
For best results:
• Go outside and away from
underground locations, covered
vehicles, structures with metal or
concrete roofs, tall buildings, and
foliage. Indoor performance might
improve if you move closer to
windows, but some window sun
shielding films can block satellite
signals.
calls
65
• Move away from radios, entertainment
equipment, and other electronic
devices that might interfere with or
block AGPS satellite signals.
If your phone cannot find strong AGPS
satellite signals, the location of the nearest
cell tower in contact with your phone is
automatically provided to the emergency
response center.
speed dial
You can assign a unique speed dial number to
each entry in your Contacts.
Note: Your service provider may have already
assigned speed dial number 1 to your voice
mail number.
To speed dial a number:
66
calls
1 Enter the speed dial number for the entry
you want to call and press #.
2 Press N to call the 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 t and New Voicemail. Press Call to
listen to the message.
To check voicemail messages:
Find it: s > e Messaging > Voicemail > CALL
Enter your four-digit unlock code if necessary
and press the center key s.
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 Contacts entry for it.
Then, you can use the entry to call your
voicemail.
calls
67
other features
advanced calling
features
insert special characters
features
voice dial
While entering a number, press
OPTIONS. Then select one of the following:
Press and release the voice key (on the
right side of the phone), then (within two
seconds) say:
Insert Pause—Your phone waits until the call
connects before it dials the next digit(s) in
the series.
• “Name dial,” followed by the name of
a Contacts entry.
or
• “Digit dial,” followed by a number.
You can use Digit Dial for numbers stored in
Contacts.
68
other features—advanced calling
Insert Wait—Your phone waits until the call
connects, then prompts you for
confirmation before it dials the next digit(s).
Insert ‘n‘—Your phone prompts you to enter a
number.
phonebook
features
create entry
s > n Contacts > [New Entry] > Phone Number
create mailing list
Create a mailing list as a single Contacts
entry:
s > n Contacts > [New Entry] > Mailing List
You can add or delete entries to or from a
mailing list. Use a group name provided by
your phone or create your own name.
features
set ringer ID for an entry
Assign a ring alert (ringer ID) to an entry:
s > n Contacts
Scroll to the entry and press Options, then
scroll to Edit and press Select. Scroll to Ringer ID
and press the center key s. Scroll to the
desired ringer_name and press Select, then
press Done to save the setting.
Activate ringer IDs:
s > t Ring Styles > style Detail > Ringer IDs
When you send a message to a mailing list,
the message goes to all Contacts entries in
that list.
other features—phonebook
69
features
set picture ID for an entry
features
view all or primary numbers
Assign a photo or picture to show when you
receive a call from an entry:
View all numbers or only primary numbers
for entries
s > n Contacts
s > n Contacts
Scroll to the entry and press Options, then
scroll to Edit and press Select. Scroll to Picture
and press the center key s. Scroll up or
down to the desired picture and press Select,
then press Done to save the setting.
set primary number
Press Options, then scroll to Setup and press
Select. Scroll to View and press Change, then
select All Contacts or Primary Contacts. Press Done
to save your selection.
edit entry
Set the primary number for a Contacts
entry with multiple numbers:
Scroll to the entry and press Options, then
scroll to Edit and press Select.
delete entry
s > n Contacts
Scroll to the entry and press Options, then
scroll to Set Primary and press Select.
70
other features—phonebook
s > n Contacts
s > n Contacts
Scroll to the entry and press Options, then
scroll to Delete and press Select.
features
copy entry
features
set category for an entry
s > n Contacts
s > n Contacts
Scroll to the entry and press Options, then
scroll to Copy Entry and press Select. Enter a
location number and press Ok.
copy multiple entries
Scroll to the entry and press Options, then
scroll to Edit and press Select. Scroll to Category,
then scroll left or right to the category you
want. Press Done to save your selection.
set category view for entries
s > n Contacts
Press Options, then scroll to Copy Entries and
press Select. Enter the range of entries to
copy in the From[start] and From[end] fields.
Next, enter a location number where you
want the entries to be copied in the To[start]
field. Press Done to copy the entries.
You can show All entries, entries in a
predefined category, or entries in a
category you create.
s > n Contacts
Press Options, then scroll to Categories and
press Select. Scroll to the desired category
and press the center key s. Press Exit to
save your selection.
Shortcut: To see other categories in the
phonebook, press * or #.
other features—phonebook
71
features
sort entries
Set the order in which entries are listed:
s > n Contacts
Scroll to an entry and press Options, then
scroll to Setup and press Select. Scroll to Sort by
and press Change. Scroll to Name, Speed No., or
Email and press Select. Press Done to save your
setting.
set speed dial number
s > n Contacts
Scroll to the entry and press Options, then
scroll to Edit and press Select. Scroll to
Speed No. and press the center key s. Enter
the speed dial number and press Ok, then
press Done to save the setting.
72
other features—messages
messages
features
send text message
s > e Messaging > Create Message
> New Text Message
Press Options to perform various actions on
the message.
use MMS template
Open an MMS template with
preloaded media:
s > e Messaging > Create Message
> Picture Msg Templates
features
view sent messages
features
read received messages
s > e Messaging > Outbox
s > e Messaging > Inbox
Scroll to the message and press Open (r).
Scroll to the message and press Open (r).
Press Options to perform various actions on
the message.
send quick text
Press Options to perform various actions on
the message.
drafts
Quick Text is a prewritten message
that you can quickly select and send. Your
phone comes with several quick notes, and
you can create additional ones.
View messages saved in Drafts folder:
s > e Messaging > Drafts
s > e Messaging > Quick Text
Press Options to perform various actions on
the message.
Scroll to the quick text you want to send
and press Options, then scroll to Send and
press Select.
Scroll to the message and press Open (s).
other features—messages
73
features
erase messages
Your phone displays and speaks Say a
command, followed by a list of voice
commands.
Delete all messages or only
messages from the Outbox or Drafts folder:
Note: If the speakerphone is not turned
on and you want to activate it, press the
smart/speakerphone key.
s > e Messaging
Press Options, then scroll to and select
Erase Messages.
personalize
speech commands
Advanced Speech Recognition enables you to
place calls and access some menu options by
speaking commands to your phone.
1 Press and release the voice key on the
right side of the phone.
2 Say one of the following commands: Name
Dial, Digit Dial, Voicemail, Redial, or Received.
Tip: Speak numbers at a normal speed
and volume, pronouncing each digit
distinctly. Avoid pausing between digits.
Your phone opens the corresponding
menu or performs the corresponding
action.
adapt advanced speech
recognition to your voice
For most people, Advanced Speech
Recognition works well for voice dialing
74
other features—personalize
without any initial setup. However, if the
phone is frequently unable to recognize
numbers correctly when you use voice
dialing, you may be able to improve your
results by adapting it to your voice.
Note: If the phone is used by several people,
reset voice dialing to the original setting
before proceeding. This ensures that you are
not saving your settings over someone else’s.
Find it: s > w Settings > Personalize
> Voice Dial Setup > Adapt Digits
1 Press START.
2 When the phone prompts you to say the
first digit sequence, wait for the beep,
then repeat the digits in a normal tone of
voice.
3 If the recording sounds acceptable (no
mistakes or background noises), say
“Yes” or press YES.
or
If the recording is not acceptable, say
“No” or press NO. When prompted to say
the digits again, wait for the beep and say
the digits again. The phone will prompt
you to repeat this process with up to
twelve additional sets of digits.
4 When the phone prompts, “More
Adaptation?”, press YES to continue or NO
to end the process.
When the adaptation process is complete,
the phone will say “Adaptation Complete.”
Tip: When adapting speech recognition to
your voice:
• Choose a quiet place for recording.
• Wait for the beep before you speak.
other features—personalize
75
• Speak at a normal speed and volume,
pronouncing each digit distinctly. Avoid
pausing between digits.
features
reminders
• If you make a mistake while recording
a sequence of digits, or if an
unexpected noise spoils the recording,
record that sequence again.
Set your phone to play reminder alerts for
picture, text, or voicemail messages that
you receive:
To reset speech recognition to the factory
defaults:
Find it: s > w Settings > Personalize
> Voice Dial Setup > Reset Digits
more personalizing features
features
ring volume
s > t Ring Styles > Style Detail > Ring Volume
keypad volume
s > t Ring Styles > Style Detail > Key Volume
76
other features—personalize
s > t Ring Styles > Style Detail >Reminders
message alerts
Set whether or not you are alerted to
messages while you are on a call:
s > t Ring Styles > Style Detail >Msg Alert
skin
Choose a phone skin that sets the look and
feel of your phone’s screen:
s > w Settings > Personalize > Skin
features
greeting
features
text layout
Change the greeting that appears
when you turn on your phone:
Set home screen text to be left justified or
centered:
s > w Settings > Personalize > Greeting
change home screen soft key labels
s > w Settings > Personalize > Home Screen
> Layout
clock view
s > w Settings > Personalize > Home Screen
> Home Keys > Left Soft Key or Right Soft Key
banner
Create a heading to display on your phone’s
home screen:
s > w Settings > Personalize > Main Menu
> Banner
Display an analog clock or digital time
readout in the home screen:
s > w Settings > Personalize > Home Screen
> Clock
menu view
Display the main menu as icons or a text
list:
s > w Settings > Personalize > Main Menu > View
other features—personalize
77
features
show or hide menu icons
features
master reset
Show or hide menu feature icons in the
home screen:
Reset all options except unlock code,
security code, and lifetime timer:
Presss > w Settings > Personalize
> Home Screen > Home Keys > Icons
menu language
s > w Settings > Initial Setup > Master Reset
s > w Settings > Initial Setup > Language
scroll
Set the scroll bar to stop or wrap around in
menu lists:
s > w Settings > Initial Setup > Scroll
78
other features—personalize
To reset all options, you need to enter the
Security Code (000000).
features
master clear
Reset all options except unlock code,
security code, and lifetime timer, and clear
all user settings and entries:
This option erases all user-entered
information stored in your phone memory,
including Contacts entries and downloaded
files. Once you erase the information, it
cannot be recovered. It resets all options to
their factory settings except for the unlock
code, security code, and lifetime timer.
s > w Settings > Initial Setup > Master Clear
To reset all options, you need to enter the
Security Code (000000).
call times
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, please contact your
service provider directly.
features
set in-call timer
s > w Settings > In-Call Setup
> In-Call Timer
other features—call times
79
features
view call times
s > s Recent Calls > Call Times
Scroll to Last Call, Dialed, Received, Roam Calls, Home
Calls, CSD Calls, All Calls, or Lifetime Calls, and press
Select.
view data times
s > s Recent Calls > Data Times
view data volumes
s > s Recent Calls > Data Volumes
handsfree
Note: The use of wireless devices and their
accessories may be prohibited or restricted in
80
other features—handsfree
certain areas. Always obey the laws and
regulations on the use of these products.
features
accessory volume settings
(car kit or headset)
Adjust volume levels of car kit accessory:
During an active call, press your phone’s up
or down volume keys.
external speakerphone
Activate a connected external
speakerphone during a call:
Press the smart/speakerphone key on the
left side of the phone.
features
auto answer
(car kit or headset)
features
power-off delay
(car kit)
Automatically answer calls when connected
to a car kit or headset:
Set the phone to stay on for a period of
time after the ignition is switched off:
s > w Settings > Car Settings or Headset
> Auto Answer
voice dial
(headset)
s > w Settings > Car Settings > Power-off Delay
charger time
(car kit)
Enable voice dial with headset send/end
key:
Charge your phone for a period of time after
the ignition is switched off:
s > w Settings > Car Settings > Charger Time
s > w Settings > Headset > Voice Dial
auto handsfree
(car kit)
Automatically route calls to a car kit when
connected:
s > w Settings > Car Settings > Auto Handsfree
other features—handsfree
81
data & fax calls
features
talk then fax
features
data settings
Connect your phone to the device,
then:
Specify call type for next call:
s > Dialing Menu > Talk Then Fax
s > w Settings > Connection > Incoming Call
Press N to make the call.
Scroll to Next Call and press Change, then select
Normal, Data In Only, or Fax In Only.
send data or fax
network
Connect your phone to the device,
then place the call through the device
application.
receive data or fax
features
network settings
Connect your phone to the device,
then answer the call through the device
application.
s > w Settings > Network Options
82
other features—data & fax calls
View network information and adjust
network settings:
personal organizer
features
copy datebook event
features
add datebook event
Copy a datebook event to another
date and/or time:
s > É Tools > 8 Datebook
s > É Tools > 8 Datebook
Scroll to the desired day and press Options,
then scroll to New and press Select.
view datebook event
Scroll to the desired day and press s, then
scroll to the event and press Options. Scroll to
Copy and press Select.
set alarm
View or edit event details:
s > É Tools > 8 Datebook
s > É Tools > Alarm Clock
turn off alarm
Scroll to the desired day and press s, then
scroll to the event and press s.
event reminder
To turn off an alarm, press Disable
or O.
Press View to view an event reminder.
To set an eight-minute delay, press SNOOZE.
Press Exit to dismiss an event reminder.
other features—personal organizer
83
features
create voice record
features
convert currency
Note: Recording phone calls is
subject to varying state and federal laws
regarding privacy and recording of
conversations.
s > É Tools > Calculator
Press and hold the voice key and begin
recording. Release the voice key when
finished.
play voice record
Press Options, then scroll to Exchange Rate and
press Select. Enter the desired exchange rate
and press Ok. Enter the amount to be
converted, then press Options. Scroll to Convert
Currency and press Select.
security
s > É Tools > Ü Voice Records
Scroll to the voice record you wish to play
and press s.
calculator
Calculate numbers:
s > É Tools > Calculator
84
other features—security
features
lock application
s > w Settings > Security > Lock Application
When prompted, enter the unlock code and
press Ok. Then scroll to the application you
wish to lock and press Change.
features
restrict calls
Restrict outgoing or incoming calls:
s > w Settings > Security > Restrict Calls
When prompted, enter the unlock code and
press Ok. Select Outgoing Calls or Incoming Calls
and press Change. With Allow: highlighted,
press Change, then select All, None, or Contacts,
and press Select.
change unlock and security codes
fun & games
features
launch browser
Start a browser session:
s > J BREW
Note: The menu option on your phone for
starting a browser session may be different
than the one shown above.
s > w Settings > Security > New Passwords
> Unlock Code or Security Code
control location
Set up a location code to control access to
the Location function:
s > w Settings > Security > New Passwords
> Location Code
other features—fun & games
85
features
manage pictures
features
manage sounds
s > h Media Gallery > Pictures
Manage sounds and create playlists:
To view a picture, scroll to the picture title
and press s.
s > h Media Gallery > Sounds
Press Options to open the Pictures Menu, which
can include the following options: Send In
Message, Send to online album, Apply As, Zoom, New,
Details, Change Details, Delete, Move, Copy, Mark, Mark
All, Assign to Category, View Free Space.
Note: The Pictures Menu includes different
options for locked or preloaded images.
86
other features—fun & games
To play a sound, scroll to the sound title and
press s.
To create a playlist, scroll to [New Playlist] and
press s.
Press Options to open the Sounds Menu, which
can include the following options: New,
Categories, Sounds Setup, View Free Space.
service & repairs
If you have questions or need assistance,
we’re here to help.
Go to www.motorola.com/consumer/
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 (/TDD United States for
hearing impaired), or 1-800-461-4575
(Canada).
service & repairs
87
Specific Absorption Rate Data
SAR Data
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
88
SAR Data
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 0.70 W/kg, and when worn on the body, as described in
this user guide, is 1.04 W/kg. (Body-worn measurements differ
among phone models, depending upon available accessories and
regulatory requirements).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.
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.
SAR Data
89
90
SAR Data
Important Safety and
Legal Information
91
Safety and General Information
This section contains important information on the safe and
efficient operation of your mobile device. Read this
information before using your mobile device.*
the relevant standards, always follow these instructions and
precautions.
Exposure to Radio Frequency (RF)
Energy
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.
Safety Information
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 information provided in this document supersedes the general
safety information in user’s guides published prior to May 1, 2006.
92
Safety Information
External Antenna Care
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, keep the mobile
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. These locations include hospitals or health
care facilities that may be using equipment that is sensitive to
external RF energy.
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.
Pacemakers
If you have a pacemaker, consult your physician before using this
device.
Persons with pacemakers should observe the following
precautions:
• ALWAYS keep the mobile device more than
20 centimeters (8 inches) from your pacemaker when the
mobile device is turned ON.
• DO NOT carry the mobile device in the breast pocket.
• Use the ear opposite the pacemaker to minimize the
potential for interference.
• Turn OFF the mobile device immediately if you have any
reason to suspect that interference is taking place.
Hearing Aids
Some mobile devices may interfere with some hearing aids. In the
event of such interference, you may want to consult your hearing
aid manufacturer or physician to discuss alternatives.
Other Medical Devices
If you use any other personal medical device, consult your
physician or the manufacturer of your device to determine if it is
adequately shielded from RF energy.
Safety Information
93
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:
• Give full attention to driving and to the road. Using a
mobile device may be distracting. Discontinue a call 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.
Responsible driving practices can be found in the “Smart Practices
While Driving” section at the end of this guide and/or at the
Motorola Web site: www.motorola.com/callsmart.
Operational Warnings
Obey all posted signs when using mobile devices in public areas,
such as health care facilities or blasting areas.
Automobile Air Bags
Do not place a mobile device in the air bag deployment area.
Potentially Explosive Atmospheres
Areas with potentially explosive atmospheres are often but not
always posted, and can include fueling areas such as below decks
94
Safety Information
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.
Damaged Products
If your mobile device or battery has been submerged in water,
punctured, or subjected to a severe fall, do not use it until you take
it to a Motorola Authorized Service Center. Do not attempt to dry it
with an external heat source, such as a microwave oven.
Batteries and Chargers
If jewelry, keys, beaded chains, or other conductive
materials touch exposed battery terminals, this
could complete an electrical circuit (short circuit),
become very hot, and could cause damage or
injury. Be careful when handling a charged battery,
particularly when placing it inside a pocket, purse, or other
container with metal objects. Use only Motorola Original
batteries and chargers.
Caution: To avoid risk of personal injury, do not dispose of your
battery in a fire.
Your battery, charger, or mobile device may contain symbols,
defined as follows:
Symbol
032374o
032376o
032375o
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.
Li Ion BATT
032378o
Your mobile device contains an internal
lithium ion battery.
Do not let your battery, charger, or mobile
device get wet.
Listening at full volume to music or voice
through a headset may damage your
hearing.
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
Safety Information
95
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
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.
96
Safety Information
Industry Canada Notice to Users
Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) This
device may not cause interference and (2) This device must accept
any interference, including interference that may cause undesired
operation of the device. See RSS-GEN 7.1.5.
Industry Canada Notice
Industry Canada Notice
97
FCC Notice To Users
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).
If your mobile device or accessory has a USB connector, or is
otherwise considered a computer peripheral device whereby it can
be connected to a computer for purposes of transferring data, then
it is considered a Class B device and the following statement
applies:
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
FCC Notice
98
FCC Notice
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.
Motorola Limited Warranty for the United States and
Canada
Warranty
What Does this Warranty Cover?
Subject to the exclusions contained below, Motorola, Inc. warrants
its telephones, pagers, messaging devices, and consumer and
professional two-way radios (excluding commercial, government
or industrial radios) that operate via Family Radio Service or
General Mobile Radio Service, Motorola-branded or certified
accessories sold for use with these Products (“Accessories”) and
Motorola software contained on CD-ROMs or other tangible media
and sold for use with these Products (“Software”) to be free from
defects in materials and workmanship under normal consumer
usage for the period(s) outlined below. This limited warranty is a
consumer's exclusive remedy, and applies as follows to new
Motorola Products, Accessories and Software purchased by
consumers in the United States or Canada, which are accompanied
by this written warranty:
Products and Accessories
Products Covered
Length of Coverage
Products and
Accessories as
defined above, unless
otherwise provided for
below.
One (1) year from the date of
purchase by the first consumer
purchaser of the product unless
otherwise provided for below.
Decorative
Accessories and
Cases. Decorative
covers, bezels,
PhoneWrap™ covers
and cases.
Limited lifetime warranty for the
lifetime of ownership by the first
consumer purchaser of the product.
Monaural Headsets.
Ear buds and boom
headsets that transmit
mono sound through a
wired connection.
Limited lifetime warranty for the
lifetime of ownership by the first
consumer purchaser of the product.
Warranty
99
Products Covered
Length of Coverage
Consumer and
Professional
Two-Way Radio
Accessories.
Ninety (90) days from the date of
purchase by the first consumer
purchaser of the product.
Products and
Accessories that are
Repaired or
Replaced.
The balance of the original
warranty or for ninety (90) days
from the date returned to the
consumer, whichever is longer.
Exclusions
Normal Wear and Tear. Periodic maintenance, repair and
replacement of parts due to normal wear and tear are excluded
from coverage.
Batteries. Only batteries whose fully charged capacity falls below
80% of their rated capacity and batteries that leak are covered by
this limited warranty.
Abuse & Misuse. Defects or damage that result from:
(a) improper operation, storage, misuse or abuse, accident or
neglect, such as physical damage (cracks, scratches, etc.) to the
surface of the product resulting from misuse; (b) contact with
liquid, water, rain, extreme humidity or heavy perspiration, sand,
dirt or the like, extreme heat, or food; (c) use of the Products or
Accessories for commercial purposes or subjecting the Product or
Accessory to abnormal usage or conditions; or (d) other acts which
are not the fault of Motorola, are excluded from coverage.
100
Warranty
Use of Non-Motorola Products and Accessories. Defects or
damage that result from the use of Non-Motorola branded or
certified Products, Accessories, Software or other peripheral
equipment are excluded from coverage.
Unauthorized Service or Modification. Defects or damages
resulting from service, testing, adjustment, installation,
maintenance, alteration, or modification in any way by someone
other than Motorola, or its authorized service centers, are
excluded from coverage.
Altered Products. Products or Accessories with (a) serial
numbers or date tags that have been removed, altered or
obliterated; (b) broken seals or that show evidence of tampering;
(c) mismatched board serial numbers; or (d) nonconforming or
non-Motorola housings, or parts, are excluded from coverage.
Communication Services. Defects, damages, or the failure of
Products, Accessories or Software due to any communication
service or signal you may subscribe to or use with the Products
Accessories or Software is excluded from coverage.
Software
Products Covered
Length of Coverage
Software. Applies only to physical
defects in the media that embodies
the copy of the software (e.g.
CD-ROM, or floppy disk).
Ninety (90) days from
the date of purchase.
Exclusions
Software Embodied in Physical Media. No warranty is made
that the software will meet your requirements or will work in
combination with any hardware or software applications provided
by third parties, that the operation of the software products will be
uninterrupted or error free, or that all defects in the software
products will be corrected.
Software NOT Embodied in Physical Media. Software that is
not embodied in physical media (e.g. software that is downloaded
from the internet), is provided “as is” and without warranty.
Who Is Covered?
This warranty extends only to the first consumer purchaser, and is
not transferable.
What Will Motorola Do?
Motorola, at its option, will at no charge repair, replace or refund
the purchase price of any Products, Accessories or Software that
does not conform to this warranty. We may use functionally
equivalent reconditioned/refurbished/pre-owned or new Products,
Accessories or parts. No data, software or applications added to
your Product, Accessory or Software, including but not limited to
personal contacts, games and ringer tones, will be reinstalled. To
avoid losing such data, software and applications please create a
back up prior to requesting service.
How to Obtain Warranty Service or
Other Information
USA
Phones
1-800-331-6456
Pagers
1-800-548-9954
Two-Way Radios and Messaging Devices
1-800-353-2729
Canada
All Products
1-800-461-4575
TTY
1-888-390-6456
For Accessories and Software, please call the telephone
number designated above for the product with which they are
used.
You will receive instructions on how to ship the Products,
Accessories or Software, at your expense, to a Motorola
Authorized Repair Center. To obtain service, you must include: (a) a
copy of your receipt, bill of sale or other comparable proof of
purchase; (b) a written description of the problem; (c) the name of
your service provider, if applicable; (d) the name and location of the
installation facility (if applicable) and, most importantly; (e) your
address and telephone number.
Warranty
101
What Other Limitations Are There?
ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION
THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS
FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, SHALL BE LIMITED TO THE
DURATION OF THIS LIMITED WARRANTY, OTHERWISE THE
REPAIR, REPLACEMENT, OR REFUND AS PROVIDED UNDER THIS
EXPRESS LIMITED WARRANTY IS THE EXCLUSIVE REMEDY OF
THE CONSUMER, AND IS PROVIDED IN LIEU OF ALL OTHER
WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED. IN NO EVENT SHALL
MOTOROLA BE LIABLE, WHETHER IN CONTRACT OR TORT
(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE) FOR DAMAGES IN EXCESS OF THE
PURCHASE PRICE OF THE PRODUCT, ACCESSORY OR SOFTWARE,
OR FOR ANY INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL OR
CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OF ANY KIND, OR LOSS OF
REVENUE OR PROFITS, LOSS OF BUSINESS, LOSS OF
INFORMATION OR DATA, SOFTWARE OR APPLICATIONS OR
OTHER FINANCIAL LOSS ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION
WITH THE ABILITY OR INABILITY TO USE THE PRODUCTS,
ACCESSORIES OR SOFTWARE TO THE FULL EXTENT THESE
DAMAGES MAY BE DISCLAIMED BY LAW.
Some states and jurisdictions do not allow the limitation or
exclusion of incidental or consequential damages, or
limitation on the length of an implied warranty, so the
above limitations or exclusions may not apply to you. This
warranty gives you specific legal rights, and you may also
have other rights that vary from state to state or from one
jurisdiction to another.
102
Warranty
Laws in the United States and other countries preserve for
Motorola certain exclusive rights for copyrighted Motorola
software such as the exclusive rights to reproduce and distribute
copies of the Motorola software. Motorola software may only be
copied into, used in, and redistributed with, the Products
associated with such Motorola software. No other use, including
without limitation disassembly of such Motorola software or
exercise of the exclusive rights reserved for Motorola, is
permitted.
Hearing Aid Compatibility with Mobile Phones
Some Motorola phones are measured for compatibility with
hearing aids. If the box for your particular model has “Rated for
Hearing Aids” printed on it, the following explanation applies.
When some mobile phones are used near some hearing devices
(hearing aids and cochlear implants), users may detect a buzzing,
humming, or whining noise. Some hearing devices are more
immune than others to this interference noise, and phones also
vary in the amount of interference they generate.
The wireless telephone industry has developed ratings for some of
their mobile phones, to assist hearing device users in finding
phones that may be compatible with their hearing devices. Not all
phones have been rated. Phones that are rated have the rating on
their box or a label on the box.
The ratings are not guarantees. Results will vary depending on the
user’s hearing device and hearing loss. If your hearing device
happens to be vulnerable to interference, you may not be able to
use a rated phone successfully. Trying out the phone with your
hearing device is the best way to evaluate it for your personal
needs.
M-Ratings: Phones rated M3 or M4 meet FCC requirements and
are likely to generate less interference to hearing devices than
phones that are not labeled. M4 is the better/higher of the two
ratings.
Hearing Aids
T-Ratings: Phones rated T3 or T4 meet FCC requirements and are
likely to be more usable with a hearing device’s telecoil (“T
Switch” or “Telephone Switch”) than unrated phones. T4 is the
better/higher of the two ratings. (Note that not all hearing devices
have telecoils in them.)
Hearing devices may also be measured for immunity to this type of
interference. Your hearing device manufacturer or hearing health
professional may help you find results for your hearing device. The
more immune your hearing aid is, the less likely you are to
experience interference noise from mobile phones.
Hearing Aids
103
Information from the World Health Organization
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
WHO Information
Product Registration
Online Product Registration:
direct.motorola.com/hellomoto/
Motosupport/source/registration.asp
Product registration is an important step toward enjoying your new
Motorola product. Registering helps us facilitate warranty service,
and permits us to contact you should your product require an
update or other service. Registration is for U.S. residents only and
is not required for warranty coverage.
Please retain your original dated sales receipt for your records. For
warranty service of your Motorola Personal Communications
Product you will need to provide a copy of your dated sales receipt
to confirm warranty status.
Thank you for choosing a Motorola product.
Registration
104
WHO Information
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
Export Law Assurances
This product is controlled under the export regulations of the
United States of America and Canada. The Governments of the
United States of America and Canada may restrict the exportation
Export Law
or re-exportation of this product to certain destinations. For further
information contact the U.S. Department of Commerce or the
Canadian Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade.
Wireless: The New Recyclable
Your wireless mobile device can be recycled. Recycling your
mobile device reduces the amount of waste disposed in landfills
and allows recycled materials to be incorporated into new
products.
The Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association (CTIA) and
its members encourage consumers to recycle their mobile devices
and have taken steps to promote the collection and
environmentally sound recycling of end-of-life devices.
As a mobile device user, you have an important role in ensuring
that this device is recycled properly. When it comes time to give
this mobile device up or trade it in for a new one, please remember
that the mobile device, the charger, and many of its accessories
can be recycled. It's easy. To learn more about CTIA's Recycling
Program for Used Wireless Devices, please visit us at:
Recycling
recycling.motorola.young-america.com/
index.html
Export Law
105
California Perchlorate Label
Some mobile phones use an internal, permanent backup battery on
the printed circuit board that may contain very small amounts of
perchlorate. In such cases, California law requires the following
label:
"Perchlorate Material – special handling may apply. See
www.dtsc.ca.gov/hazardouswaste/
perchlorate."
There is no special handling required by consumers.
Perchlorate Label
106
Perchlorate Label
Smart Practices While Driving
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
Driving Safety
•
•
•
•
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.
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.
Driving Safety
107
• 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.
108
Driving Safety
index
Numerics
1X indicator 43
accessories 8
AGPS 60, 61, 65
airplane mode 14
airplane mode indicator 44
alarm clock 83
alert
set 56
turn off 62
answer a call 11, 57
attach a number 63, 68
backlight 59
banner 77
battery 10
extending battery life 9
battery charge indicator light
battery level indicator 44
Bluetooth connection
indicator 44
Bluetooth indicator light 1
brightness 59
browser 85
browser key 1
cables 39
calculator 84
call
answer 11, 57
end 11
external speakerphone 80
make 11
call times 79, 80
caller ID 70
calls
data 82
fax 82
restricting 85
capitalize text 48
car kit 80
center key 1
clear/back key 1
clock
index
109
analog 77
digital 77
codes 54, 55
security 85
Contacts 63, 68, 69
copy entry 71
create entry 69, 70
create mailing list 69
primary number 70
set category view 71
set entry category 71
set entry view 70
set speed dial 72
sort entries 72
data call 82
data call/tethered/embedded
WAP/BREW indicator
43
data calls 82
110
index
volume meters 80
data times 80
dial a phone number 11
dialed calls 62
digital indicator 43
display 42
brightness 59
display timeout 59
drafts folder 73
E911 indicator 43
emergency number 64
end a call 11
end key 1, 11
Enter Unlock Code message
54
export regulations 105
external display 52
fax call 82
fax calls 82
faxing 82
greeting 77
handsfree speaker 53
handsfree use 80
headset
accessory, using 80
hearing aids 103
home screen 42
soft key indicators 77
indicators
1X 43
airplane mode 44
battery level 44
Bluetooth connection 44
data call/tethered/
embedded WAP/
BREW 43
digital 43
E911 43
location on 43
message 44
no service 43
phone locked 43
roaming 43
signal strength 43
sound on & vibrate on 44
sounds loud 44
sounds off (silent) 44
sounds soft 44
speakerphone 44
text entry mode 48
uanswered call 43
voice call 43
iTAP text entry method 50
keypad volume 76
layout, text 77
location 60, 85
location on indicator 43
lock
phone 55
locking 84
make a call 11
master clear 79
master reset 78
menu
icons, show or hide 78
language 78
scroll 78
show icons or list 77
message
drafts 73
erase 74
MMS template 72
quick text 73
text message 72
view sent message 73
message indicator 44
messages
alerts 76
indicator 44
Missed Calls message 64
MMS template 72
MP3 music player 14
music player 14
album 19
artist 18
genre 19
index
111
tips 21
turn off 21
wake up 21
navigation key 1, 8
network settings 82
networks 82
no service indicator 43
notepad 64
number. See phone number
numeric entry method 51
open to answer 57
optional accessory 8
optional feature 8
passwords. See codes
112
index
perchlorate label 106
phone
network settings 82
talking phone 59
phone locked indicator 43
phone number 13
picture ID 70
playlists 22
power key 1, 11
push bar 1
quick text 73
received calls 62
recent calls 62
recycling 105
redial 62
reminders 76
return a call 64
ring style, setting 56
ring volume 76
ringer ID 69
roaming indicator 43
safety information 92
safety tips 107
screen savers 58
security 84
security code 54
security codes 85
send key 1, 11
signal strength indicator 43
skin 76
soft keys 1, 42
indicators 77
sound on & vibrate on
indicator 44
sounds loud indicator 44
sounds off (silent) indicator
44
sounds soft indicator 44
speakerphone
automatic answer 81
speakerphone indicator 44
speakerphone, external
activating 80
speech
commands 74
recognition 74
speed dial 66
store your number 13
symbol entry mode 51
tap text entry method 49
telephone number. See
phone number
text entry 46
capitalization 48
entry mode indicators 48
text layout 77
turn on/off 11
unanswered call indicator 43
unlock
code 54, 55
phone 54, 55
USB cables 39
video clips 24
voice call indicator 43
voice dial 68, 81
voicemail 66
voicemail message indicator
66
volume
keypad 76
ring 76
wallpaper 57
warranty 99
WHO information 104
your phone number 13
U.S. patent Re. 34,976
index
113
114
index

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