Motorola Solutions 89FT5845 iDEN i415 User Manual i415BoostMobile

Motorola Solutions, Inc. iDEN i415 i415BoostMobile

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USER MANUAL 2

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Document ID555304
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Document DescriptionUSER MANUAL 2
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Document TypeUser Manual
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Filesize77.68kB (970975 bits)
Date Submitted2005-06-23 00:00:00
Date Available2005-06-23 00:00:00
Creation Date2005-06-23 16:06:52
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Boost MobileTM Voice Mail
Greetings Schedule
Automatic Playback
You can choose to have your greetings
automatically activated based on a pre-determined
time schedule. By activating the Greeting
Schedule, Greetings 1, 2, and 3 will automatically
play according to the time schedule listed below.
By default, the playback mode of your voice mail
service is set to normal. This feature automatically
plays and saves new messages when you log in.
To activate automatic playback:
Greeting 1 Evenings and 5:00 pm – 7:59 am,
Weekends
Monday – Friday
24-hours, Saturday
and Sunday
Greeting 2 Weekday
Mornings
8:00 am – 11:59 am
Monday – Friday
Greeting 3 Weekday
Afternoons
Noon – 4:59 pm
Monday – Friday
To activate the greeting schedule:
1 From the main voice mail menu, press 3 to
access the greetings menu.
2 Press 9 to activate your greeting schedule.
3 Press ** to return to the main menu.
Note: The greeting schedule, when on, will
override any other greeting that you may
set as active. If a greeting is not recorded,
a system standard greeting will be played.
80
1 From the main voice mail menu, press 4 to
access personal options.
2 Press 4 to access personal preferences.
3 Press 2 to access playback preferences.
4 Press 2 to switch between automatic and
normal playback.
5 Press ** to return to the main menu.
Changing the Playback Order of Messages
You can select the order in which you want
unheard messages to be played. You may listen to
the last received message first, or you may listen to
the first received message first. To select the order
in which new messages should be played:
1 From the main voice mail menu, press 4 to
access personal options.
2 Press 4 to access personal preferences.
3 Press 2 to access playback preferences.
4 Press 1 to switch between the playback orders.
5 Press ** to return to the main menu.
Advanced Voice Mail Features
Recording, Forwarding, and Replying to
Messages
These functions allow you to record and send,
reply to, or forward a message to an assigned
destination address list number. If you record a
complete or partial message, but do not send it,
Boost MobileTM Voice Mail service will refer to this
message as an “in preparation” message.
To record and send a message:
1 From the main voice mail menu, press 2 to
record a message.
2 Record your message and press # to end the
message.
3 Press 9 at the prompt to indicate that you want
to send the message or press 5 for delivery
options.
4 Enter the mail box number list number(s). (A
mail box number is the 10-digit Boost MobileTM
PTN of a Boost MobileTM customer. The Boost
MobileTM customer must be in your local calling
area. The name of the recipient plays if it is
recorded.)
5 Press # to send.
6 Press ** to return to the main menu.
Note: You can only send messages using this
method to Boost MobileTM customers in
your home market.
Delivery Options
After you have created a message, you can assign
the message to a category before you send it.
Below is a list of the options that can be applied to
a message:
• Urgent — Recipient will hear this message
before other messages.
• BoostTM Walkie-Talkie— Recipient cannot copy
the message to another mail box or phone
number.
• Notification of Non-Delivery — You will be
notified if the recipient has not listened to your
message by a certain date and time.
• Future Delivery — You can specify a time and
date (up to three months in advance) for the
message to be delivered.
Note: All dates must have digits in the MM/DD
format (2 digits for the month and 2 digits
for the date). For example, January 2nd
would be 0102.
Important: Once a message has been sent for
future delivery, it cannot be retrieved or
deleted.
To set a special delivery option:
1 After recording your message, but before
sending it, press 5 for delivery options.
81
Boost MobileTM Voice Mail
2 Press the number that corresponds with the
desired delivery option:
• Press 1 for urgent.
• Press 2 for private.
• Press 3 for notification of non-delivery. At
prompt, specify time and date.
• Press 4 for future delivery of messages. At
prompt, specify time and date.
• Press 9 to send the message immediately.
3 The list of options will be presented again.
Select an additional option or press 9 to send
the message.
4 Enter the destination mail box list number of the
recipient(s).
5 Press # to send.
6 Press ** to return to the main menu.
Working With Group Lists
This feature enables you to create a list and assign
it a unique name. Then, you can add mail box
numbers, group lists, or individuals. Once you
create a list, you can send a voice message to
everyone on the list by entering the group list
number. You can have up to 40 group lists. Each
list can hold up to 50 addresses.
82
To set up a group list:
1 From the main voice mail menu, press 4 to
access personal options.
2 Press 2 to access your group lists.
3 Press 2 to create a group list.
4 Enter the 1- or 2-digit group list number and
press #.
5 Record a name for the list and press #.
6 Select group members by mail box number,
group list, or name.
7 Press # to save all entries added to the list.
8 Press ** to return to the main menu.
To modify a group list:
1 From the main voice mail menu, press 4 to
access personal options.
2 Press 2 to access group lists.
3 Press 4 to modify a group list. Enter the
number of the group list you want to modify.
4 Press 1 to add a new recipient.
5 Press # to save your changes.
6 Press ** to return to the main menu.
To delete a group list:
1 From the main voice mail menu, press 4 to
access personal options.
Advanced Voice Mail Features
2 Press 2 to access group lists.
3 Press 3 to delete a group list.
4 Enter the number of the group list you want to
delete. The system will play the name of the
group list.
5 Press # to delete the list.
6 Press ** to return to the main menu.
• To enable or disable message forwarding,
press 3.
• To change the forwarding type, press 2.
4 Press ** to return to the main menu.
Message Forwarding
Note: You can only forward messages to Boost
Mobile customers in your home market.
This feature allows you to program your phone to
automatically forward incoming messages to
another mail box. There are two types of
forwarding: notified and silent. Notified forwarding
prompts the caller that the message will be
forwarded. Silent forwarding does not prompt the
caller that the message will be forwarded.
To modify forwarding options:
1 From the main voice mail menu, press 4 to
access personal options.
2 Press 5 to modify forwarding options.
3 Select the applicable option below:
• To create a forwarding number, press 2.
• If you have already created a forwarding
number, press 2 to modify the number.
83
SMS
SMS Messages
Short Message Service (SMS) messages are short
text messages, also called text and numeric
messages. You can send SMS messages through
any email account or on www.boostmobile.com.
Your phone receives SMS messages sent to its
SMS address, but does not send SMS messages.
Your phone's SMS address is your
PTN@myboostmobile.com.
If your phone is powered off when you receive a
message, your phone notifies you the next time
you power it on. If you are out of your coverage
area, your phone alerts you when you return to
your coverage area.
Your phone attempts to deliver these messages for
up to 7 days.
2 If the message fills more than one screen, scroll
to read it.
3 To keep the message, press O. -orTo delete the message, scroll to the end of the
message, then press A under Delete.
To dismiss the message notification:
Press A under Back.
This icon w appears on the display, reminding
you that you have a new message.
Reading from the Message Center
1 From the main menu, select Messages > SMS.
2 Select the message you want to read.
3 If the message fills more than one screen, scroll
to read it.
4 To keep the message, press O. -orTo delete the message, scroll to the end of the
message, then press A under Delete.
Receiving a Message
Calling and Storing Numbers
When you receive a text and numeric message,
New Text Message appears on the display.
If an SMS message you receive contains a phone
number, you can call that number by pressing s
while viewing the message.
To view the message:
1 Press A under Read.
84
SMS Messages
If an SMS message you receive contains a phone
number, BoostTM Walkie-Talkie number, or
Talkgroup ID, you can call or send a call alert to
that number, or store that number to Contacts.
Press m while viewing the message to access
these options.
To call the number, select Call Back.
To send a call alert, select Alert, then press the
BoostTM Walkie-Talkie button.
To store the number to Contacts, select Store
Number.
85
BoostTM Wireless Web
Services
You can use your phone’s Web feature to access a
suite of wireless data products known as BoostTM
Wireless Web. Services include Text Messaging,
Web and Premium Web, Address Book, Mobile
Email, and wireless access to AOL® Instant
MessengerTM.
With the exception of the Text Messaging Express
service, BoostTM Wireless Web Services require
the activation of a BoostTM Wireless Web service
plan. To order, go to www.boostmobile.com or call
1-888-BOOST-4U (1-888-266-7848). You can also
contact your BoostTM Authorized Dealership.
Starting the Microbrowser
Just as you use Netscape Navigator® or Microsoft®
Internet Explorer to browse the Web from your
desktop, the microbrowser allows you to explore
and use a variety of Internet services. To begin
using the BoostTM Wireless Web:
Press m to access the Main Menu.
Scroll to Web.
Press A under SELECT.
Your home page displays.
86
Note: The first time you access Web, you will be
asked to enable security to ensure your
information remains private and secure.
• Press A under Yes. The phone will
display: Generating…, Computing…,
Sending))))).
• You may be asked to (re)enable
security as BoostTM adds new services or
upon your return to the U.S. after
traveling.
• When transmitting highly personal or
sensitive data, such as a credit card
number, you will see the Secure Data icon
E. This icon indicates that the data is
encrypted during transmission.
5 Scroll to highlight the service you wish to access
and press A under Ok. -orPress the number shown to the left to
automatically jump to that service.
Press * to return to the previous screen.
To return to the home page, press e.
6 To exit the browser, press e until the idle
screen displays. -orPress and hold m. The Browser Menu screen
displays with Exit Browser highlighted.
Starting the Microbrowser
Press A under OK. When you re-enter Web,
you will enter on the page from which you exited
BoostTM Wireless Web Navigation
Keys
For more information and multimedia demos, go to
www.boostmobile.com. You can also get one page
service-specific guides called Frequently Asked
Questions and other instruction for BoostTM
Wireless Web Services at www.boostmobile.com.
• Home — Press e to return to your home page.
Tip: Press e twice to return to your phone's
idle screen.
• Back — Press * to return to a previous
screen.
• Scroll — A scroll bar on the left of the phone’s
display indicates that additional text can be
viewed. Scroll using the navigation key.
Tip: While navigating through BoostTM Wireless
screens, a number may appear to the left of
the application or topic you want to access.
Press the corresponding number on the
keypad for quicker access to that
application or topic.
When transmitting highly personal or sensitive
data, such as a credit card number, this icon
E appears, indicating that the data is encrypted
during transmission.
Note: You may be asked to (re)enable security
as BoostTM adds new services or upon
your return to the U.S. after traveling.
87
My Pictures
Managing Memory
My Pictures lets you view pictures you received in
MMS messages.
To view your used memory, free memory, and
memory capacity:
Viewing Pictures
To view pictures stored in My Pictures:
1 From the main menu, select My Pictures.
The pictures stored are listed by name.
2 Select the picture you want to view.
Note: If this icon ] appears next to a picture,
you cannot send it in a message.
Getting File Information
To view the file type and file size of a picture:
1 Scroll to or select the picture.
2 Press m.
3 Select Details.
Deleting Pictures
1 Scroll to or select the picture you want to delete.
2 Press m.
3 Select Delete.
88
1 Scroll to or select any picture.
2 Press m.
3 Select Memory Size.
Note: Pictures are stored in your phone using
the same memory space used to store
Java applications data, voice records, ring
tones, messages, and wallpaper images.
Deleting some of these other items frees
memory space for pictures.
My Info
Note: If you request equipment-related
transactions on your account, BoostTM
Customer Care may require you to
provide specific information about your
phone. By pressing m anytime while in
My Info, a submenu will appear that
includes your phone’s service status, unit
information, and phone identification
numbers including IMEI, SIM ID, and
Serial Number (SN). Please be prepared
to supply the representative with this
information when requesting these types
of transactions.
My Info lets you view information about your phone
and send this information to other phones.
Viewing My Info
1 From the main menu, select My Info.
2 Scroll to see the entire screen.
The My Info screen contains:
• My Name — You can enter your name here.
• Line 1 — your phone numbers for phone line 1.
Each number appears when you receive your
first call on that line.
• BoostTM Walkie-Talkie Number — Your
BoostTM Walkie-Talkie number is the number that
others use to contact you using BoostTM
Walkie-Talkie calls. This number appears when
you receive your first BoostTM Walkie-Talkie call.
• Carrier IP — the IP address assigned to
BoostTM. This number appears when you
register for packet data services.
• IP1 Address and IP2 Address — the IP
addresses you use to access the Internet with
your phone.
Editing My Info
To edit My Info to enter or change the text that
appears in My Name:
From the main menu, select My Info.
Press A under Edit.
Select Name.
Enter the name you want to appear. See
“Entering Text” on page 30. When you are
finished, press O.
You can also edit the information in Line 1, but
your changes are only temporary. The next time
your phone registers on the network, your actual
phone number will reappear in My Info.
89
My Info
Setting Sending Options
Automatic Sending
Your phone can send information in My Info to
other phones that have this capability.
To control whether your information is sent
automatically:
You can control what portion of the information in
My Info is sent and whether it is sent automatically
in every BoostTM Walkie-Talkie call or only when
you choose to send it.
Information Sent
The information your phone sends always includes
My Name and BoostTM Walkie-Talkie number.
It may include Line 1 and Carrier IP, depending
on how you set your sending options.
To change which fields are sent:
From the main menu, select My Info.
Press m.
Select Send My Info Setup > Info to Send.
A checkmark appears next to the fields that will
be sent. To add or remove the checkmark, select
the field.
5 When you are finished, press A under Done.
90
From the main menu, select My Info.
Press m.
Select Send My Info Setup > AutoSend.
To set your information to be sent automatically,
set this option to On. -orTo set your information to be sent only when you
choose to send it, set this option to Off.
Using Walkie-Talkie Send
Walkie-Talkie Send lets you exchange My Info and
contact information with other phones that have
this capability. You do this through BoostTM
Walkie-Talkie calls.
Sending My Info and Contact
Information
When you send My Info or contact information
using Walkie-Talkie Send, the information you sent
appears on the display of the phone you are
engaged in the BoostTM Walkie-Talkie call with.
After the call, the information appears on the recent
call list of that phone.
Sending My Info
You can control what portion of the information in
My Info is sent and whether it is sent automatically
in every BoostTM Walkie-Talkie call or only when
you choose to send it. See “Setting Sending
Options” on page 90.
Tip: When you send My Info, certain
information, such as your email address or
fax number, cannot be included. To send
complete contact information, create an
entry for yourself in Contacts and send.
Sending Information During a Call
1 While in a BoostTM Walkie-Talkie, press m.
2 With WT Send My Info highlighted, press O.
3 When Ready to Send appears on the display,
press the BoostTM Walkie-Talkie button to send
the information.
Starting a Call by Sending Information
From the main menu, select My Info.
Press m.
With WT Send My Info highlighted, press O.
Use the keypad to enter the BoostTM
Walkie-Talkie number you want to send the
information to. -orPress A under Browse. Select Contacts,
Recent Calls, or Memo. Select the number you
want to enter.
5 When Ready to Send appears on the display,
press the BoostTM Walkie-Talkie button to send
the information.
Sending Contact Information
You can send contact information by selecting a
Contacts entry or an item from the recent calls list.
91
Using Walkie-Talkie Send
Contacts entries that contain only addresses
cannot be sent. When Contacts entries are
received, they do not include ring tones or pictures.
These items from the recent calls list can be sent:
• Contact information sent from other phones
• Calls to or from numbers store in your Contacts
list
Sending Information During a Call
Press A under Browse. Select Contacts,
Recent Calls, or Memo. Select the number you
want to enter.
5 When Ready to Send appears on the display,
press the BoostTM Walkie-Talkie button to send
the information.
Receiving My Info or Contact
Information
1 While in a BoostTM Walkie-Talkie call, press m.
2 Select Contacts or Recent Calls.
3 Scroll to the Contacts entry or item in the recent
calls list you want to send.
4 When Ready to Send appears on the display,
press the BoostTM Walkie-Talkie button to send
the information.
When you receive My Info or contact information
from another phone, an icon appears on the
display:
Starting a Call by Sending Information
To view the information while still in the BoostTM
Walkie-Talkie call:
1 From the Contacts list, scroll to or select the
entry you want to send. -orFrom the recent calls list, scroll to or select the
item you want to send.
2 Press m.
3 Select WT Send Contact.
4 Use the keypad to enter the BoostTM
Walkie-Talkie number you want to send. -or92
j My Info.
d Contact information.
1 Press m.
2 Select View Contact.
You can also view My Info from other phones on
the recent calls list. See “Recent Calls” on page 26.
Voice Records
A voice record is a recording you make with your
phone and can play back. You can record notes to
yourself when your phone is not in a call or record
phone calls when your phone is in a call.
Viewing Voice Records
To view your list of voice records:
1 From the main menu, select VoiceRecord.
2 Scroll to view more voice records.
Voice Records Icons
One of these icons appears next to each voice
record:
c A voice record made while your phone was
not in a call.
v A voice record made while your phone was in
a call.
Filtering by Voice Record Type
You can set your phone to show all voice records,
only voice records created when your phone was in
a call, or only voice records created when your
phone was not in a call.
From the main menu, select VoiceRec.
Press m.
Select Filter.
Select the option you want:
• All — show all voice records.
• In Call — show only voice records created
when your phone was in a call.
• Normal — show only voice records created
when your phone was not in a call.
Tip: You can also press * or # to scroll
through these options while viewing the list
of voice records.
Creating Voice Records
Phone Not in a Call
To record a note to yourself:
1 From the main menu, select Record > [New
VoiceRec].
93
Voice Records
2 Say the message you want to record into the
microphone.
Tip: To stop recording before you are finished,
press A under Pause. To start recording
again, press A under Resume.
3 When you are finished recording, press O.
To add to the end of an existing voice record:
From the main menu, select VoiceRecord.
Scroll to the voice record you want to add to.
Press m.
Select Add To.
When you are finished recording, press O.
Phone in a Call
To record a phone call:
1 While on an active call, press m.
2 Select Record.
3 When you are finished recording, press O.
Note: Recording of phone calls is subject to
applicable laws regarding privacy and
recording of phone conversations.
Playing Voice Records
1 From the main menu, select VoiceRecord.
2 Select the voice record you want to play.
3 To stop the voice record while it is playing, press
O.
Tip: To pause or resume, press any key.
Labeling Voice Records
When you create a voice record, it is labeled with
the time and date it was recorded. You can then
rename it with a custom label.
From the main menu, select VoiceRecord.
Scroll to the voice record you want to label.
Press A under Label.
Enter the label you want to assign. See
“Entering Text” on page 30.
5 Press O.
Locking Voice Records
When you lock a voice record, it cannot be deleted
until you unlock it.
1 From the main menu, select VoiceRecord.
2 Scroll to the voice record you want to lock or
unlock.
94
Deleting Voice Records
3 Press m.
4 Select Lock to lock the message. -orSelect Unlock to unlock the message.
When a voice record is locked, this icon R appears
next to it.
Deleting Voice Records
Deleting a voice record from the voice record list
deletes it from all parts of your phone, including the
media center.
Deleting a Voice Record
1 From the main menu, select VoiceRecord.
2 Scroll to the unlocked voice record you want to
delete.
3 Press m.
4 Select Delete.
5 Press O or A under Yes to confirm.
Deleting All Voice Records
Managing Memory
To view the amount of memory available for voice
records:
1 From the main menu, select VoiceRecord.
2 With [New VoiceRec] highlight, press A under
Memory. -orWith any voice record highlighted, press m.
Select Memory.
To free more memory by deleting all unlocked
voice records:
1 From the voice records memory screen, press A
under Delete.
2 Press O or A under Yes to confirm.
Note: Voice Records are stored in your phone
using the same memory space used to
store Java applications data, voice
records, ringtones, messages, and
wallpaper images. Deleting some of these
other items frees memory space for voice
records.
From the main menu, select VoiceRecord.
Scroll to any voice record.
Press m.
Select Delete All.
Press O or A under Yes to confirm.
95
Java® Applications
Your phone arrives with Java applications installed
and ready to run. You can download and install
more Java applications.
To download and install more Java applications, go
to the BoostLIVE menu option on your phone or
visit www.boostmobile.com.
Note: Using Java applications may cause your
phone to use up more battery power than
other uses of your phone.
Running Applications
To run an application that has a shortcut on the
main menu:
1 From the main menu, select the application or
suite of applications you want to run.
2 If you have selected a suite of applications,
select the application you want to run.
Tip: If you don’t hear the sounds associated with
the Java application, select Settings >
Volume and check the volumes of Java
Speaker and Java Earpiece.
Suspending Applications
When you suspend an application, it does not stop
running. It goes to the background so that you can
run another application in the foreground.
To suspend an application:
Press e.
To view your suspended applications:
From the Java menu, select Suspended Apps.
You can have up to 3 applications running at one
time — 1 running in the foreground and 2 in the
background.
Resuming Applications
To run an application that does not have a shortcut
on the main menu:
You can resume a suspended application at any
time. This brings it to the foreground.
1 From the main menu, select Java Apps.
2 Select the application or suite of applications
you want to run.
3 If you have selected a suite of applications,
select the application you want to run.
1 From the Java menu, select Suspended Apps.
2 Select the application you want to resume.
96
Ending Applications
Ending Applications
Downloading Applications
To end an application:
If you want to run more Java applications, you can
download them into your phone.
1 From the main menu, select Java Apps.
2 If the application you want to end is part of a
suite of applications, select the suite.
3 Scroll to the application you want to end.
Press A under End. -orIf End is not one of your options: Press m. Select
End.
Tip: You can also end applications from the
Suspended Apps screen.
4 Press A under End.
To end all applications:
From the main menu, select Java Apps.
Scroll to Suspended Apps.
Press m.
Select End All.
If you want to end all applications without letting
them exit, press A under EndNow.
Tip: You can also end applications from the
Suspended Apps screen.
Check the BoostLIVE menu option on your phone
for a catalog of items available for purchase and
download.
You can also go to www.boostmobile.com for a
selection of Java applications and downloading
instructions.
Installing Applications
Before running most application you have
downloaded, you must install them.
1 From the main menu, select Java Apps.
2 Select the application or suite of applications
you want to install.
3 If you want to create a shortcut to the Java
application on the main menu: Press A under
Next. Press A under Yes.
4 Press O.
5 Press A under Done.
97
Java® Applications
About DRM Java Applications
To delete all Java applications:
Your phone supports gifting and Tell-A-Friend
services for DRM java applications. However,
these services may not be offered by BoostTM.
Please contact BoostTM for more information about
these services.
For more information about DRM items, see
“Digital Rights Management (DRM)” on page 102.
Deleting Applications
Note: Under certain conditions, some DRM
vendors will not charge you if you
download an item multiple times within a
given time frame. Please contact the DRM
vendor to learn more about their
download regulations.
To delete an application:
From the main menu, select Java Apps.
Scroll to the application you want to delete.
Press m.
Select Deinstall.
Press O or press A under Yes to confirm.
When your phone has finished deleting the
application, press A under Done.
98
From the main menu, select Java Apps.
Scroll to Java System.
Press m.
Select Delete All.
Press O or press A under Yes to confirm.
Managing Memory
To view the amount of memory available for Java
applications:
1 From the main menu, select Java Apps > Java
System.
2 Press A under Next.
3 To see more memory information, press A
under Next again.
Deleting Java applications frees memory.
Note: Java application data is stored in your
phone using the same memory space
used to store voice records, ringtones,
and wallpaper images. Deleting some of
these other items frees memory space for
Java applications.
Shortcuts on the Main Menu
Shortcuts on the Main Menu
When you install an application, you can create a
shortcut to the application on the main menu.
To create a shortcut to an application that is
already installed:
1 From the main menu, select Settings >
Personalize > Menu Options > Add/Remove
Apps. -orFrom the main menu: Press m. Select Main
Menu Setup > Add/Remove Apps.
2 Scroll to view the list of Java applications. Any
application that has a shortcut on the main menu
has a checkmark next to it.
3 Scroll to the application you want to create a
shortcut for.
4 Press O.
5 Press A under Done.
To remove a shortcut:
1 From the main menu, select Settings >
Personalize > Menu Options > Add/Remove
Apps. -orFrom the main menu: Press m. Select Main
Menu Setup > Add/Remove Apps.
2 Scroll to view the list of Java applications. Any
application that has a shortcut on the main menu
has a checkmark next to it.
3 Scroll to the application you want to remove the
shortcut for.
4 Press O.
5 Press A under Done.
Java Applications and GPS
Enabled
Some Java applications can make use of your
phone’s GPS feature to determine the approximate
geographical location of your phone. (See “GPS
(Global Positioning System) Enabled” on page 104
for more information on the GPS feature.)
However, for privacy reasons, you may not always
want Java applications to access the location of
your phone. Your phone protects your privacy by
giving you the option to block all or some Java
applications from accessing the location of your
phone.
Setting Privacy for All Java
Applications
These options control the privacy of all Java
applications on your phone:
99
Java® Applications
• Restricted — No Java or similar software
applications may access the location of your
phone. However, location information may still
be available to the phone’s owner, fleet
manager, or account administrator.
• Unrestricted — All Java applications may
access the location of your phone, without
notifying you.
• By Permission — When a Java application
attempts to access the location of your phone,
you are prompted to give permission. However,
location information may still be available to the
phone’s owner, fleet manager, or account
administrator.
See “Setting Privacy Options” on page 109 for
information on choosing these options.
Granting or Denying Permission
If you choose By Permission, you must grant or
deny each Java application access to the location
of your phone when the application requests
access for the first time. You may be required to
grant or deny subsequent requests from the same
application, depending on the privacy setting you
choose for the individual Java application (see
“Setting Privacy for Each Java Application” on
page 101).
100
When a Java application requests access the
location of your phone, a screen appears informing
you.
To deny this request:
1 Press A under Deny. The application does not
access the location of your phone.
2 Select the denying option you want:
• Always — If the application requests access
to the location of your phone again, the
request is denied without notifying you.
• For this session — If the application
requests access to the location of your phone
again before you power off your phone, the
request is denied without notifying you.
• Only Once — If the application requests
access to the location of your phone again,
you are prompted to grant or deny
permission.
To grant this request:
1 Press A under Grant. The application accesses
your phone’s location.
2 Select the granting option you want:
• Always — If the application requests access
to the location of your phone again, the
request is granted without notifying you.
Java Applications and GPS Enabled
• For this session — If the application
requests access to the location of your phone
again before you power off your phone, the
request is granted without notifying you.
• Only Once — If the application requests
access to the location of your phone again,
you are prompted to grant or deny
permission.
Setting Privacy for Each Java
Application
• Always — The application always has
permission to access the location of your
phone, without notifying you.
• Ask — When the application requests access
to the location of your phone, you are
prompted to grant or deny permission (see
“Granting or Denying Permission” on page
100).
• Never — When the application requests
access to the location of your phone, the
request is denied without notifying you.
After a given Java application requests access to
the location of your phone for the first time, you
have the opportunity to set GPS privacy option for
that Java application.
1 From the main menu, select Java Apps.
2 Select the application or suite of applications
you want to set the privacy option for.
If the application has requested access to the
location of your phone, m appears when you
highlight the application.
3 Press m.
4 Select Permissions.
5 Select the privacy option you want for this
application:
101
Digital Rights
Management (DRM)
Viewing License Information
When you download multimedia content available
online, such as Java applications, these items may
be subject to DRM restrictions. DRM, or digital
rights management, is a system that defines how
copyrighted multimedia content can be distributed
and used.
• For time-based items, either the date and time
the item is scheduled to expire, or the number of
days left
• For count-based items, the number of credits
(uses) left or an unlimited use notice
• The name of the item’s vendor
DRM limits items to time-based or count-based
usage settings. Time-based settings let you use
the given item for a specified interval. Examples of
time-based settings include being able to use an
item for a specified number of days from the date
of purchase, a specified number of days from the
date that the item is first used, or a specified
number of minutes. Count-based settings let you
use an item for a specified number of times after
you download it or for unlimited use.
Managing Items
Note: Depending on how the third-party vendor
has set rights for the given DRM item, you
may be unable to perform some of the
following tasks.
102
You can check a DRM item’s license to view the
following information:
To view the license of a DRM item:
1 Go to the location on your phone that contains
the item you want.
2 Highlight the DRM item you want to view license
information for.
3 Press m.
4 Select License Info.
Renewing DRM Licenses
Note: You can only renew DRM licenses if the
license contains a link to the page where
you purchased the item.
1 Go to the location on your phone that contains
the item you want.
2 Highlight the DRM item you want to renew.
Managing Items
3 Press A under Renew or press m. Select
Renew.
4 Select the link to the page where you purchased
the item.
5 Follow the vendor’s instructions for purchasing
an additional license.
About Expired Items
Most items will continue to display on your phone
until you delete them. You can also choose to
renew the license for an expired item.
Note: You cannot delete items that are DRM
locked.
Deleting Items
If you delete a DRM item that you purchased from
BoostTM from your phone, you will have to
purchase it again to download it.
Note: You cannot delete locked items.
Under certain conditions, third-party vendors will let
you download an item multiple times within a given
time frame, even if you deleted the item. Please
contact the third-party vendor of an item to learn
more about the vendor’s download regulations.
To delete an item:
1 Go to the location on your phone that contains
the item you want.
2 Highlight the DRM item you want to delete.
3 Press m.
4 Select Delete.
5 If prompted, press A under Yes.
103
GPS (Global Positioning
System) Enabled
You can also use the GPS feature to view your
approximate location. Location information
appears on the phone’s display.
Your phone’s GPS Enabled feature uses
information from Global Positioning System (GPS)
satellites orbiting the Earth to determine the
approximate geographical location of your phone,
expressed as latitude and longitude. The
availability and accuracy of this location
information (and the amount of time that it takes to
calculate it) will vary depending on the environment
in which you are using the GPS feature. For
example, GPS location fixes are often difficult to
obtain indoors, in covered locations, between high
buildings, or in other situations where you have not
established a clear broad view of the sky. Also,
nearby radio and electronic equipment may block
or interfere with reception from these distant
satellites. SEE: “IMPORTANT: Things to Keep in
Mind”.
IMPORTANT: Things to Keep
in Mind
When you make a 911 emergency call, the GPS
feature of your phone can help emergency
personnel locate you if your phone has adequate
access to GPS satellite signals and your
emergency response center is equipped to process
such information.
104
Java applications loaded on your phone can also
request your location. If your phone is connected to
a laptop computer or similar device, software
running on that device can request your location.
To protect your privacy, you can control whether
these requests are granted.
If you are using the GPS feature of your phone
while driving, please give full attention to driving
and to the road.
Where adequate signals from multiple satellites
are not available (usually because your GPS
antenna cannot establish a view of a wide area of
open sky), the GPS feature of your phone WILL
NOT WORK. Such situations include but are
not limited to:
• In underground locations
• Inside of buildings, trains, or other covered
vehicles
• Under any other metal or concrete roof or
structure
Making an Emergency Call
• Between tall buildings or under dense
tree-cover
• Near a powerful radio or television tower
• When your GPS antenna is covered (for
example, by your hand or other object) or
facing the ground
• In temperature extremes outside the
operating limits of your phone
While the GPS feature of your phone can be a
valuable navigational aid, it does not replace the
need for careful navigating and good judgment.
Never rely solely on one device for navigation.
Remember that the accuracy of the location
information and the time needed to obtain it will
vary depending on circumstances, particularly the
ability to receive signals from adequate numbers of
satellites.
Walking or driving very slowly may also
substantially reduce GPS performance.
On emergency calls, your phone uses assistance
information from the phone network to improve the
speed and accuracy of your phone’s location
calculation: if such assistance information
becomes unavailable, it may reduce the speed and
accuracy of the location calculation.
Even where location information can be
calculated in such situations, it may take much
longer to do so, and your location estimate may
not be as accurate. Therefore, in any 911 call,
always report the location to the emergency
response center if you can and if you cannot,
remain on your phone for as long as the
emergency response center instructs you.
Even where adequate signals from multiple
satellites are available, your GPS feature will
only provide an approximate location, often
within 150 feet (45 meters) but sometimes
much further from your actual location. Advice
on how to improve GPS performance is
provided in “Enhancing GPS Performance” on
page 107.
The satellites used by the GPS feature of your
phone are controlled by the U.S. government and
are subject to changes implemented in accordance
with the Department of Defense GPS user policy
and the Federal Radionavigation Plan. These
changes may affect the performance of the GPS
feature of your phone.
Making an Emergency Call
Dial 911 to be connected to an emergency
response center. If you are on an active call, you
must end it before calling 911.
105
GPS (Global Positioning System) Enabled
When you make an emergency 911 call, the GPS
feature of your phone begins to seek information to
calculate your approximate location. It will take
the GPS feature of your phone some time to
determine your approximate location. Even
where your phone has good access to sufficient
GPS satellite signals and network assist data, it
may take 30 seconds or more to determine the
approximate location. This time will increase where
there is reduced access to satellite signals. When
your approximate location is determined, it is made
available to the appropriate emergency response
center.
In some cases, your local 911 emergency
response center may not be equipped to
receive GPS location information. For this
reason, and because the GPS location information
reported is only approximate or may not be
available in your location (see “IMPORTANT:
Things to Keep in Mind” on page 104), always
report your location to the 911 operator you
speak to when making an emergency call, if able,
just as you would when using a phone without GPS
capabilities.
Note: If you are concerned about whether your
local 911 emergency response center is
equipped to receive GPS location
information, contact your local authorities.
106
In general, if your phone has access to signals
from more GPS satellites, your location will be
determined faster and more accurately than if your
phone has access to signals from fewer GPS
satellites.
If your phone does not have adequate access to
GPS satellites signals, the location of the nearest
cell tower in contact with your phone is
automatically made available to the emergency
response center, if the center has the capability to
receive such information.
See “Enhancing GPS Performance” on page 107
for information on how to help your phone
determine your location.
Viewing Your Approximate
Location
1 From the main menu, select GPS > Position.
2 Scroll to view the entire screen.
This displays the following information about the
last time your location was calculated:
• The time (as Greenwich Mean Time) and date
that the location was last calculated.
• The approximate location, expressed as latitude
and longitude.
Enhancing GPS Performance
• The estimated accuracy of the calculated
location. This estimate of accuracy is only a very
rough estimate and may vary substantially from
the actual accuracy of the approximate location
information reported.
• The number of satellites used to calculate the
location. In general, more satellites make for
better accuracy.
To calculate your location again:
Press A under Refresh.
It may take your phone several minutes to
complete the process of determining your location.
During this time, a message usually appears on
your phone’s display saying your phone is
scanning for satellites. For tips on getting the best
location calculation, see “Enhancing GPS
Performance”.
The Position screen displays the updated
information.
To cancel a location calculation before it is
completed:
Press A under Cancel to return to the Position
screen. -or-
Each time approximate location of your phone is
calculated, the latest location information is stored
in your phone and remains there even when your
phone is powered off. You will see this information
the next time you view the Position screen.
If you received a phone call or alert while
attempting to determine your location, the Position
screen will disappear, but your phone will continue
attempting to determine its location. If it is
successful, the new location information will be
displayed the next time you view the Position
screen.
Enhancing GPS Performance
Sometimes the GPS feature of your phone may be
unable to complete a location calculation
successfully. If this happens when you are making
an emergency call, the location of the nearest cell
tower in contact with your phone is made available
to the appropriate emergency response center if
the center has the capability to receive such
information. If this happens when you are trying to
view your location on the phone’s display, you will
see a message indicating that your phone cannot
access satellites.
Press e to return to the idle screen.
107
GPS (Global Positioning System) Enabled
To improve accuracy and increase your chances of
a successful calculation, do the following while
your phone is determining your approximate
location:
• Stay in the open. The GPS feature works best
where there is nothing between your phone and
a large amount of open sky. If possible, go
outside, away from tall buildings and foliage.
While performance in a building is improved by
moving closer to windows, glass with certain sun
shielding films may block satellite signals.
• Extend your phone antenna.
108
• Hold your phone to enhance reception. Signals
from GPS satellites are transmitted to your GPS
antenna, which is in your phone antenna. Hold
your phone away from your body, giving the
antenna clear access to satellite signals. Do not
cover the antenna area with your fingers or
anything else.
GPS antenna
Updating Satellite Almanac Data
• Stand still. If possible, stand still until your phone
is finished determining your location. Moving
your phone at a walking pace while your phone
is calculating your approximate location may
substantially decrease GPS performance.
• In a car. When using the GPS Enabled feature in
a car, position your phone so that the GPS
antenna has good access to GPS signals
through the car’s windows. Typically, the GPS
antenna has best access to GPS signals in a car
when placed near a window.
Note: Although moving your phone at a walking
pace decreases GPS performance,
moving it at the speed of a moving car
does not.
• Stay in network coverage. Depending on who
your service provider is, the network will provide
your phone with information that helps
determine your location more quickly and
accurately.
Updating Satellite Almanac
Data
Another way to keep the GPS feature of your
phone working well is to keep your satellite
almanac data up to date.
The United States government maintains an
almanac of data about where GPS satellites are as
they orbit the Earth. This information is available to
your phone. Keeping your satellite almanac up to
date helps your phone determine your location
more quickly.
The almanac contains information about the
location of satellites, their operational status, and
other satellite information. Keeping this information
updated enhances the performance of your GPS
feature. In most cases, your phone will be able to
get a fix in strong satellite signal conditions with
outdated almanac data, but it may take longer.
Note: When you make an emergency call, your
phone does not rely upon the almanac to
determine your location.
If your satellite almanac data is out of date, your
phone may prompt you to update it. Follow the
instructions that appear on the phone’s display.
You may be asked to go to a web site or call a
customer care number.
Setting Privacy Options
Your phone’s GPS privacy options control whether
Java applications on your phone or other software
applications may view the location of your
phone.You may set your phone to one of these
GPS privacy options.
109
GPS (Global Positioning System) Enabled
Note: Privacy options do not apply to the
transmission of location information
during emergency 911 calls.
To set your GPS privacy options:
1 From the main menu, select GPS > Privacy.
2 If your GPS PIN security feature is enabled,
enter your GPS PIN. (See “Setting the GPS PIN
Security Feature” for more information.)
3 Select the privacy option you want:
• Restricted — No Java or similar software
applications may view the location of your
phone. However, location information may still
be available to the phone’s owner, fleet
manager, or account administrator.
• Unrestricted — All applications may view the
location of your phone, without notifying you.
• By Permission — When an application
attempts to view the location of your phone,
you will be prompted to give permission.
However, location information may still be
available to the phone’s owner, fleet manager,
or account administrator.
Setting the GPS PIN Security Feature
To prevent your GPS privacy settings from being
altered without your knowledge, your GPS privacy
option can be protected by a PIN.
110
When you receive your phone, the GPS security
feature is turned off, so you do not have to enter a
GPS PIN to access your GPS privacy options. If
you turn this feature on, you will be required to
enter a GPS PIN to access your GPS privacy
options.
To turn the GPS Enabled security feature on or off:
1 From the main menu, select Settings >
Security > GPS PIN.
2 Select On or Off.
3 Enter the current GPS PIN.
Note: When you receive your phone, your GPS
PIN is 0000.
4 Press A under Ok.
To change your GPS PIN:
1 From the main menu, select Settings >
Security > Change Password > GPS PIN.
2 Enter the current GPS PIN.
Note: When you receive your phone, your GPS
PIN is 0000.
Press A under Ok.
Enter the new 4- to 8-digit GPS PIN.
Press A under Ok.
Enter the new 4- to 8-digit GPS PIN to confirm.
Press A under Ok.
Using GPS with Map Software
Using GPS with Map Software
Software Compatibility
You can use the GPS feature of your phone to
provide approximate location data to a laptop
computer or similar device that is running
interactive map software such as that made by
DeLorme or Microsoft. This way, if your phone has
good access to GPS signals, your approximate
position on a map can be made available as you
travel in a vehicle.
Your phone sends location information to your
laptop or other device using the standard National
Marine Electronics Association (NMEA) format.
Your phone supports output messages in
NMEA-0183 format and supports the following
NMEA-0183 sentences: GGA, GLL, GSA, GSV,
RMC, and VTG.
To do this, connect your phone to your laptop (or
other device) with a data cable and set your phone
to transmit data (see “Getting Started” on page
111). Your phone then provides your approximate
location to the device running the map software,
which displays your location on a map. Your phone
provides an updated location every second and the
map software displays your changing location on
its map.
The map software running on your laptop or other
device must support NMEA 3.0.
Getting Started
To connect your phone to your laptop or other
device:
1 Locate the accessory connector.
See “Enhancing GPS Performance” on page 107
for more details on obtaining good location
information.
Note: Because your phone is continuously
determining your location, using the GPS
feature of your phone with map software
uses the phone’s battery power quickly.
accessory
connector
111
GPS (Global Positioning System) Enabled
2 With the phone’s display facing up, insert the
data cable’s connector into the accessory
connector, until you hear a click.
To set your phone to send location information to
your laptop or other device:
1 From the main menu, select GPS > Interface.
2 Set NMEA OUT to On.
Your phone is now sending location data to your
laptop or other device.
To stop your phone from sending location data to
your laptop or other device:
Set NMEA OUT to Off.
Each time you power your phone on, NMEA OUT
is automatically set to Off.
3 Insert the data plug into the COM port of your
laptop or other device.
Make sure no other application is using the COM
port selected.
Make sure the COM port settings of your laptop or
other device are set to the following:
•
•
•
•
•
Bits per second: 4800
Data bits: 8
Parity: None
Stop bits: 1
Flow control: Hardware
112
Datebook
Datebook stores up to 250 events. You can store
events over a 13 month period — 12 months after
and 1 month before the current date.
A Datebook event may contain:
• A subject — A name you assign to the event.
You can also enter a phone number or BoostTM
Walkie-Talkie number. After the event is stored,
you can call this number from Datebook or when
you get a reminder of this event.
• A location — The location of the event. You can
also enter a phone number or BoostTM
Walkie-Talkie number. After the event is stored,
you can call this number from Datebook or when
you get a reminder of this event.
• A start time — The start time automatically
assigned to an event is the beginning of the day.
You can change the start time, or assign no start
time, before storing the event.
• A duration — the length of time the event lasts
• A date — The date automatically assigned to an
event is the date that was highlighted or
selected when you began creating the event.
You can change this date before storing the
event.
• A repeat — lets you store the event as a
recurring event.
• A reminder — If an event has a start time, you
can set Datebook to remind you that the event is
going to start.
• a ring tone for the reminder
• a profile that your phone is switched to while the
event is occurring
• a Java application that starts when the event
starts
Only the subject and date are required.
Viewing Datebook
To access Datebook:
From the main menu, select Datebook.
You can view Datebook by the day, by the week, or
by the month. You can also view the details of any
event.
In day view, brief information about each event for
that day appears.
In week view, events appear as markers
corresponding to their times.
In month view, days with events appear with a
marker in the corner.
113
Datebook
To view an event:
Creating Events
1 Select the day the event occurs.
2 Select the event.
Every Datebook event must have a subject and be
stored to a date. Other information is optional.
To change the current view:
You may enter the information in any order by
scrolling through the event details.
1 While viewing Datebook, press m.
2 Select the view you want.
Navigating Datebook
After you have entered the information you want,
you can press A under Done to store the event to
Datebook.
To scroll through Datebook:
If you decide you don’t want to store the event:
Scroll left and right using the navigation key. -orIn week view and month view, press * or #.
To see more in day view:
Scroll up and down using the navigation key.
To highlight a day in month view:
Enter the date using the keypad.
To go to today’s date:
1 While viewing Datebook, press m.
2 Select Go To Today.
Press A under Cancel.
To create a Datebook event:
1 While viewing datebook, press A under New.
-orIn day view, select [New Event].
2 To assign a subject to the event:
Select Subject.
Enter the name. See “Entering Text” on page
30. -or-
To go to any date in Datebook:
Press A under Browse to choose from
common event names. -or-
1 While viewing Datebook, press m.
2 Select Go To Date.
3 Select the date you want.
Enter a phone number or BoostTM Walkie-Talkie
number. After the event is stored, you can call
this number.
114
Creating Events
When you are finished, press O.
3 If you want to assign a location to the event:
Select Location.
Select Date.
Enter the date you want.
7 If you want to make the event a recurring event:
Enter the location. See “Entering Text” on page
30. -or-
Select Repeat.
Enter a phone number or BoostTM Walkie-Talkie
number. After the event is stored, you can call
this number.
If the event occurs more than once a week:
Select Multiple Day. Select the days you want.
When you are finished, press O.
4 The start time automatically assigned to an
event is the beginning of the day. If you want to
change the start time or assign no start time:
Select the repeat cycle you want.
Press A under Done.
Select the date you want this event to stop
recurring.
8 If you want to create reminder for this event.
Select Start.
Select Reminder.
Enter the start time you want. -or-
Select the reminder time you want. -or-
Press A under No Time to assign no start time.
Select Custom to enter a reminder time.
5 If you want to assign a duration to the event:
Select Duration.
Select the duration you want. -orSelect Custom to enter a duration.
6 The date automatically assigned to an event is
the date that was highlighted or selected when
you began creating the event. To change the
date of the event:
Note: If an event has no start time, you can not
create a reminder for it.
9 If you have entered all the information you want
for this event, press A under Done. -orIf you want to assign a ring tone, a profile, or a
Java application to the event, see “Assigning
More Options”.
115
Datebook
Assigning More Options
Editing Events
To assign more options before storing an event:
To change the details of an event:
1 If you have created a reminder for the event and
want to set the ring tone for that reminder:
1 Highlight the day the event occurs.
2 Select the event.
3 Press A under Edit.
Tip: To copy an event to another date: Press m.
Select Copy.
Select Ring Tone.
Select the ring tone you want from the ring tones
stored in your phone.
2 If you want to assign a profile that your phone is
switched to while the event is occurring:
Select Profile.
Select the profile you want from the profiles
stored in your phone.
Your phone switches to this profile when the
event starts and switches back to the previous
profile when the event ends.
3 If you want to assign a Java application to start
when the event starts:
4 Follow the applicable instructions in “Creating
Events” on page 114 to edit the various fields.
Deleting Events
Select the day the event occurs.
Select the event.
Press m.
Select Delete.
If the event is a recurring event, press O or
press A under Yes to confirm. -or-
Select App.
If the event is a recurring event:
Select the application you want from the Java
applications stored in your phone.
Select This Event Only to delete only the event
selected in step 2.
If you created a reminder for this event, your
phone prompts you to start the Java application
when you get the reminder.
Select Repeat Event to delete all occurrences
of the event.
116
Receiving Reminders
Receiving Reminders
Making Calls From Datebook
If you created a reminder for a Datebook event,
when the reminder time occurs, your phone notifies
you with text on the display and a reminder tone.
If you stored a phone number or BoostTM
Walkie-Talkie number in the Subject or Location
field of a Datebook event, you can call or send a
call alert to that number from Datebook.
To view more details about the event:
Press A under View.
To dismiss the reminder:
Press O or press A under Dismiss.
Tip: You can set your phone to power on when
you receive a reminder. See “Customizing
Datebook Setup” on page 118.
You can call the number stored in Subject and the
number stored in Location if one is a phone
number and the other is a BoostTM Walkie-Talkie
number. If both are the same type of number, the
number in Subject is called or sent a call alert. To
call or send a call alert to the number stored in
Location, you must delete the number stored in
Subject.
For Events with Java Applications
To make a call or send a call alert:
If you assigned a Java application to start when the
event starts, you can start the application when you
get the reminder.
1 Highlight or select the event containing the
number you want to call or send a call alert to.
2 To make a phone call:
1 Press m.
2 Select Launch.
Press s. -or-
For Events with Numbers to Call
To make a BoostTM Walkie-Talkie:
If you stored a phone number or BoostTM
Walkie-Talkie number in the Subject or Location
field of a Datebook event, you can call or send a
call alert to that number from the reminder for that
event.
Press and hold the BoostTM Walkie-Talkie button
on the side of your phone. -or-
Press m. Select Call # in Event.
To send a call alert:
Press m. Select Alert # in Event.
117
Datebook
Customizing Datebook Setup
To access Datebook set up options:
1 From the main menu, select Datebook.
2 Press m.
3 Select Setup.
You can view or change these options:
• Start View — sets Datebook to start in day view,
week view, or month view when you access
Datebook.
• Daily Begin — sets the beginning of your day.
This is the earliest time of day displayed in week
view, if you have a 12-hour day view.
• Reminders — If this option is set to Only When
On, your phone reminds you of events only
when it is on. If this option is set to Always, your
phone powers itself on when you receive
reminders. To avoid draining the battery, your
phone then powers itself off after a short time.
• Delete After — sets the amount of time
Datebook waits to delete an event after is
occurs.
• Time Shift — lets you shift the times of all
Datebook events. This is useful if you are
traveling to a different time zone.
118
• Alert Timeout — sets the amount of time a tone
continues to sound when you receive a
Datebook reminder.
• Clock — controls whether the time and date
appear on the idle screen; sets time and date
format; sets year.
Profiles
Viewing Profiles
A profile is a group of settings saved together so
that you can apply them to your phone easily.
To view the profiles stored in your phone:
A profile contains these settings:
• Ring Tones — sets all options described in
“Ring Tones” on page 56, except assigning ring
tones to Contacts.
• Display/Info — sets Wallpaper, Color Palette,
Text Size, and Backlight options. See
“Display/Info Features” on page 138.
• Phone Calls — sets Set Line and Auto Ans
options. See “Phone Calls Features” on page
138.
• Volume — sets all options described in “Volume
Features” on page 140.
• Call Filter — controls which calls, call alerts,
and message notifications your phone responds
to. See “Setting Call Filtering” on page 122.
• Advanced — sets headset option. See
“Changing the Look of Your Phone” on page
135.
Your phone arrives with pre-set profiles. You can
also create your own profiles.
1 From the main menu, select Profiles.
2 Select the profile you want to view.
Tip: The profile that is currently in effect on your
phone has a checkmark next to it.
3 Press A under View.
4 Scroll and select settings to view their values.
Switching Profiles
To apply a profile to your phone:
1 From the main menu, select Profiles.
2 Scroll to the profile you want to apply.
3 Press O.
The profile you selected is now in effect.
How Changing Settings
Affects Profiles
Many of the settings contained in profiles can be
set without switching or editing profiles — for
example, by selecting Settings or Ring Tones to
set options, or by setting the volume of the phone’s
ring using the volume controls.
119
Profiles
When you do this, your phone either:
• Updates the profile in effect to reflect these
changes, without notifying you -or• Creates a temporary profile that contains these
changes
To set your phone to create a temporary profile
that contains changes you make to settings:
From the main menu, select Profiles.
Press m.
Select Setup > Temp Profile.
Set this option to On.
To set your phone to update the profile in effect to
reflect any changes you make to settings:
Set Temp Profile to Off in step 4.
Temporary Profiles
If your phone is set to create temporary profiles, a
temporary profile is created when you make
changes to settings without switching or editing
profiles.
A temporary profile is based on the profile in effect
when you made the changes, but reflects the
changed settings. Making more changes further
updates the temporary profile, for as long as it is in
effect.
120
A temporary profile stays in effect until you switch
profiles, power off your phone, or delete it (or the
profile it is based on) from the list of profiles.
If you do not store a temporary profile, it is deleted
when you switch profiles or power off your phone.
A temporary profile is automatically given the same
name as the profile it is based on, but with an
asterisk (*) in front of it.
When you view a temporary profile’s settings, the
options that differ from the profile it is based on
have an asterisk in front of them.
Storing a Temporary Profile
To store a temporary profile as a new profile:
From the main menu, select Profiles.
Scroll to the temporary profile.
Press m.
Select Store As New.
Enter the name you want to give the profile. See
“Entering Text” on page 30.
When you are finished, press O.
To overwrite the profile that temporary profile is
based on:
1 From the main menu, select Profiles.
2 Scroll to the temporary profile.
Creating Profiles
3 Press m.
4 Select Store Changes.
The temporary profile is stored with the name of
the profile it is based on. The profile it is based on,
as it existed before you made changes to settings,
is gone.
Creating Profiles
1 From the main menu, select Profiles.
2 Select [New Profile]. -orScroll to any profile. Press m. Select New.
3 Enter the name you want to give the profile. See
“Entering Text” on page 30.
When you are finished, press O.
4 If you want to base this profile on an existing
profile: Select Copy from. Select the profile you
want to base this profile on. If you do not choose
a profile to copy from, the new profile is based
on a default profile.
5 Press A under Create.
6 Scroll through the list of options and set their
values.
7 Press A under Done.
Editing Profiles
From the main menu, select Profiles.
Scroll to the profile you want to edit.
Press m.
Select Edit.
Scroll through the list of options and set their
values.
Deleting Profiles
To delete a profile:
1 From the main menu, select Profiles.
2 Select the profile you want to delete.
Note: A temporary profile is automatically
deleted when the profile it is based on is
deleted.
3 Press m.
4 Select Delete.
5 Press O or press A under Yes to confirm.
To delete all profiles:
From the main menu, select Profiles.
Press m.
Select Delete All.
Press O or press A under Yes to confirm.
121
Profiles
Setting Call Filtering
The call filtering setting in each profile lets you
control which calls, call alerts, and message
notifications your phone notifies you of, and which
it ignores.
To set call filtering:
1 While setting options for a profile, select Call
Filter.
2 To set filtering options for phone calls, select
Phone.
• Off sets your phone to notify you of all phone
calls.
• All sets your phone to ignore all phone calls.
• All Contacts sets your phone to notify you
only of phone calls from numbers stored in
Contacts.
• Some Contacts sets your phone to notify you
only of phone calls from numbers you select
from Contacts.
3 If you set the Phone option to Some Contacts,
select up to 5 Contacts entries that contain
phone numbers you want to be notified of calls
from.
When you are finished, press A under Done.
4 To set filtering options for BoostTM Walkie-Talkie
calls, select Prvt/Grp.
122
• Off sets your phone to notify you of all
BoostTM Walkie-Talkie calls.
• On sets your phone to ignore all BoostTM
Walkie-Talkie calls.
5 To set filtering options for call alerts, select
Alerts.
• Off sets your phone to notify you of all call
alerts.
• On sets your phone to ignore all call alerts.
6 To set filtering options for message notifications,
select Notifications.
• Off sets your phone to notify you of all
messages.
• Voice Messages sets your phone not to
sound a tone or vibrate when you receive
voice messages.
• Text Messages sets your phone not to sound
a tone or vibrate when you receive text
messages.
• All sets your phone not to sound a tone or
vibrate when you receive any message.
Note: When you receive a type of message you
have set not to sound a tone or vibrate,
the messages notification screen appears
as usual.
7 Press A under Done.
Customizing Your Phone
Setting the Volume
To set your phone to vibrate instead of making a
sound when you receive BoostTM Walkie-Talkie
calls, even if you want your phone to ring for other
features:
1 From the main menu, select Settings > Volume.
2 Scroll to Earpiece to set the earpiece volume.
-or-
1 From the main menu, select Settings > WT
Options > Alert Type.
Tip: If Alert Type does not appear: From the
main menu, select Ring Tones. Make sure
VibeAll is set to Off. Repeat step 1.
Scroll to Speaker to set the speaker volume.
2 Select Vibrate to set your phone to vibrate. -or-
Of the Earpiece and Speaker
3 To set the volume:
Scroll left or right. -orPress the volume controls.
Note: The volume of the shutter sound for the
camera is controlled by your phone’s
speaker volume.
Of the Ringer
Press the volume controls.
Setting Your Phone to Vibrate
To set your phone to vibrate instead of making a
sound when you receive all phone calls, Boost TM
Walkie-Talkie calls, group calls, call alerts,
message notifications, and Datebook reminders,
see “Setting Your Phone to Vibrate” on page 56.
Select Silent to set your phone to neither vibrate
nor make a sound.
Changing the Look of Your
Phone
Wallpaper
A wallpaper is an image that appears on the idle
screen.
Note: Some themes may prevent you from
changing your wallpaper.
Choosing a Wallpaper
1 From the main menu, select Settings >
Display/Info > Wallpaper > Wallpaper.
2 Select the wallpaper you want.
123
Customizing Your Phone
Tip: If you want to see what the wallpaper looks
like, press A under View.
Setting Wallpaper to Change Automatically
Setting Contrast
To set the contrast of the display:
1 From the main menu, select Settings >
Display/Info > Wallpaper > Auto Cycle.
2 Select how often you want the wallpaper to
change.
1 From the main menu, select Settings >
Display/Info > Contrast.
2 To set the contrast of the full-sized display,
select Display.
3 Scroll left or right to set the contrast.
Any of the wallpapers in your phone may appear
on the idle screen.
Setting the Menu View
Setting Text Size
To set the size of the text on the internal display:
1 From the main menu, select Settings >
Display/Info > Text Size.
2 Select the option you want:
• Zoom — 11 characters per line
• Standard — 14 characters per line
• Compressed — 18 characters per line
To set your phone to briefly display very large
digits when you enter numbers at the idle screen:
1 From the main menu, select Settings >
Display/Info > Large Dialing.
2 Set this option to Large Digits.
124
You can set the items on your main menu and Java
applications menu to appear as large icons or a
list:
1 From the main menu, select Settings >
Display/Info > Menu View. -orFrom the main menu: Press m. Select Main
Menu Setup > Menu View.
2 To choose a list, select List View. -orTo choose large icons, select Icon View.
Setting the Backlight
A backlight lights the display and keypad when you
make or receive a call or press keys or buttons.
Airplane Mode—Temporarily Turning Off Calls
If you do not do any of these things for 10 seconds,
the backlight dims. If you do not do any of these
things for 30 seconds or more, the backlight turns
off.
When the backlight is off, pressing a key on the
keypad turns the backlight on but does not perform
the action associated with the key.
To control how long the backlight stays on:
1 From the main menu, select Settings >
Display/Info > Backlight > Timer.
2 Select the number of seconds you want the
backlight to stay on.
Tip: To control how long the backlight stays on
while a Java application is displayed: Select
Settings > Display/Info > Backlight >
Java Timer.
To set the keypad backlight to light up only in low
light conditions:
1 From the main menu, select Settings >
Display/Info > Backlight > Sensor.
Set this option to On.
Airplane Mode—Temporarily
Turning Off Calls
Sometimes you may want to have your phone on,
but turn off its ability to make and receive calls,
such as when you are on an airplane.
To set your phone so that it can not make or
receive phone calls, BoostTM Walkie-Talkie calls, or
transfer data:
1 From the main menu, select Settings >
Advanced > Airplane Mode.
2 Set this option to On.
This icon U appears.
To restore your phone’s ability to do all these
things:
Set this option to Off.
Using Settings
Settings contains many submenus that let you
customize your phone.
For information on applying groups of setting to
your phone together, see “Profiles” on page 119.
125
Customizing Your Phone
Display/Info Features
Phone Calls Features
The Display/Info menu controls how the keypad
and display appear:
The Phone Calls menu controls how your phone
handles phone calls:
• Wallpaper — controls the wallpaper that
appears on the idle screen.
• Palette — changes the color scheme of the
display.
• Text Size — sets size of text on the display.
• Home Icons — controls whether main menu
icons appear on the idle screen.
• Backlight — controls backlight illumination.
• Clock — controls whether the time and date
appear on the idle screen; sets time and date
format; sets year.
• Menu View — controls whether the items on
your main menu and Java applications menu
appear as large icons or a list.
• Large Dialing — sets large digits to appear on
the idle screen when you enter a number.
• Contrast — sets the contrast of the display.
• Language — sets the language that your phone
displays.
• Set Line — sets phone line 1 as the active line
for outgoing calls.
• Any Key Ans — If this feature is on, you can
answer calls by pressing any key on the keypad.
• Auto Redial — sets your phone to automatically
redial calls you make when the system is busy.
• Auto Ans — sets your phone to automatically
answer an incoming call after a specified
number of rings. When this feature is on, the
phone answers by connecting you to the caller;
it does not send the call to voice mail, unless
you are out of coverage or on the line.
• Minute Beep — causes a beep to sound every
minute of an active call.
• Call Duration — causes the duration of a call to
appear on the display when the call ends.
• TTY — See “Making TTY Calls” on page 46.
• Notifications — See “Setting Notification
Options” on page 50.
• Java App Control — If you have installed a
Java application that answers phone calls, this
setting lets you turn that application on.
126
Using Settings
Walkie-Talkie Options Features
The Walkie-Talkie Options menu controls how your
phone handles BoostTM Walkie-Talkie calls:
• One Touch WT — See “Setting One Touch
BoostTM Walkie-Talkie®” on page 44.
• Tkgrp Silent — controls whether you hear
group calls to your Talkgroup. See “Call Timers”
on page 44.
• Tkgrp Area — lets you define your Talkgroup
area.
• Alert Type — controls how your phone notifies
you when you receive BoostTM Walkie-Talkie
calls and group calls.
Personalize Features
The Personalize menu makes main menu items
easier to access.
• Menu Options — Reorder Menu lets you
change the order of the items on the main menu
by grabbing and moving them; Add/Remove
Apps lets you create a shortcut to a Java
application on the main menu.
• Up Key — sets the main menu item you access
when you scroll up from the idle screen.
• Down Key — sets the main menu item you
access when you scroll down from the idle
screen.
• Left Key — sets the main menu item you access
when you scroll left from the idle screen.
• Right Key — sets the main menu item you
access when you scroll right from the idle
screen.
• Center Key — sets the main menu item you
access when you press O from the idle screen.
• Left Softkey — sets the main menu item you
access when you press the left option key from
the idle screen.
• Right Softkey — sets the main menu item you
access when you press the right option key from
the idle screen.
• Power Up — sets the main menu item you see
when you power on your phone. To set the idle
screen to be the first thing you see when you
power on your phone, select Default Ready.
Volume Features
The volume menu sets the volume of sounds your
phone makes:
• Line 1 — sets ringer volume for phone line 1.
• Messages — sets the volume of message
notifications and Datebook reminders.
127
Customizing Your Phone
• Earpiece — sets the volume of sound coming
out of the earpiece.
• Speaker — sets the volume of sound coming
out of the speaker.
• Keypad — sets the volume of sound associated
with pressing keys and buttons.
• Java Earpiece — sets the volume of sound
associated with Java applications coming out of
the earpiece.
• Java Speaker —sets the volume of sound
associated with Java applications coming out of
the speakers.
Security Features
The Security menu lets you turn security features
on and off and change passwords:
• Phone Lock — turns on a feature that locks
your phone: Lock Now takes effect immediately;
Auto Lock takes effect when your phone is
powered off and then on. An unlock code is
required to enable this feature, to unlock the
phone, and to set a new unlock code. Contact
BoostTM Customer Care for your default unlock
code.
• Keypad Lock — locks the phone’s keypad,
either immediately or automatically after a set
period of inactivity.
128
• SIM PIN — enables and disables your phone’s
SIM PIN security feature. See “Turning the PIN
Requirement On and Off” on page 15.
• GPS PIN — enables and disables your phone’s
GPS PIN security feature. See “Setting the GPS
PIN Security Feature” on page 110.
• Change Passwords — changes your phone
unlock code, security code, SIM PIN, and GPS
PIN.
Advanced Features
The Advanced menucontains advanced and rarely
used Settings features.
• Alert Timeout— sets the amount of time a tone
continues to sound when you receive a
message notification, call alert, or Datebook
reminder.
• Headset/Spkr — sets headset option. See
“Changing the Look of Your Phone” on page
123.
• Connectivity — Network ID sets the phone’s
network IDs and their roaming options under the
direction of BoostTM Customer Care; Master
Reset lets BoostTM Customer Care reset your
service in the event of a security or provisioning
problem.
Using Settings
• Reset Defaults — Reset Settings returns all
settings to their original defaults; Reset All
returns all settings to their original defaults and
erases all stored lists. Use only under the
direction of BoostTM Customer Care.
• Return to Home — controls how long the recent
calls list displays after calls.
• Airplane Mode — prevents your phone from
making or receiving phone calls, BoostTM
Walkie-Talkie calls or transferring data.
• Phone Only — prevents your phone from
making or receiving BoostTM Walkie-Talkie calls
or group calls, or transferring data.
• Baud Rate — sets the baud rate at which your
phone communicates with a laptop computer,
PC, or similar device.
129
Shortcuts
Shortcuts lets you access most menu options by
pressing a number on your keypad (1 through 9) or
saying the voice name of the shortcut. You create
the shortcut and then use it to take you to that
screen any time.
Creating a Shortcut
Note: When you receive your phone, all number
keys may already be assigned to
shortcuts. If this is the case, you can
create new shortcuts by deleting or
replacing existing shortcuts.
1 Go to the menu item you want to create a
shortcut for.
For example, if you want to create a shortcut to
the screen for creating a new Contacts entry:
From the main menu, select Contacts > [New
Contact].
2 Press and hold m until a confirmation screen
appears.
3 Press O or press A under Yes.
4 Select Key.
5 Press the key number you want to assign to the
shortcut.
130
6 Press O.
7 If you want to record a voice name for the
shortcut: Select Voice. As directed by the
screen prompts, say and repeat the name you
want to assign to the number. Speak clearly into
the microphone.
8 Press A under Done.
9 If the number key you chose is already assigned
to a shortcut, a prompt appears asking if you
want to replace the existing shortcut.
Press A under Yes to replace the existing
shortcut. -orPress A under No if you want to keep the
existing shortcut and assign another number key
to the shortcut.
Using a Shortcut
If you know the shortcut number:
1 From the idle screen, press m.
2 On your keypad, press the number assigned to
the shortcut.
If you do not know the shortcut number:
1 From the main menu, select Shortcuts.
2 Scroll to the shortcut you want to use. -or-
Editing a Shortcut
If you assigned a voice name to the shortcut:
Press t. Say the voice name into your phone.
The shortcut with that voice name is then
highlighted.
4 With Key or Voice highlighted, press O to
change assignments.
Deleting Shortcuts
3 Press O.
To delete a shortcut:
Editing a Shortcut
To change the number assigned to a shortcut:
From the main menu, select Shortcuts.
With any shortcut highlighted, press m.
Select Reorder.
Highlight the shortcut you want to move.
Press A under Grab.
Scroll to the place where you want the shortcut
to appear.
7 Press A under Insert.
8 Repeat step 4 through step 7 for all the items
you want to move.
9 Press A under Done.
From the main menu, select Shortcuts.
Scroll to the shortcut you want to delete.
Press m.
Select Delete.
Press O or press A under Yes to confirm.
To delete all shortcuts:
From the main menu, select Shortcuts.
With any shortcut highlighted, press m.
Select Delete All.
Press O or press A under Yes to confirm.
To change the name or number assigned to a
shortcut:
1 From the main menu, select Shortcuts.
2 Highlight any shortcut.
3 Press A under Edit.
131
Using a Headset
If you use a headset or similar device with your
phone, you can set your phone to send incoming
sound to the headset only, or to the headset and
the speaker at the same time:
1 From the main menu, select Settings >
Advanced > Headset/Spkr.
2 Select HdsetOnly to send incoming sound to
the headset only. -orSelect Hdset&Spkr to send incoming sound to
the headset and ring tones to the speaker. .
Attaching a Headset
1 Lift the audio jack cover.
2 Insert the headset connector firmly into the
audio jack. You may have to rotate the headset
connector until it fits securely into the audio jack.
Using a Remote BoostTM
Walkie-Talkie Button
If you are using a headset or other accessory with
a remote BoostTM Walkie-Talkie button, you can
use the remote BoostTM Walkie-Talkie button for
phone calls and BoostTM Walkie-Talkie calls.
132
For phone calls, use the remote BoostTM
Walkie-Talkie button to answer calls, switch
between calls, and end calls. Hold the remote
BoostTM Walkie-Talkie button for less than 2
seconds to answer calls and switch between calls.
Hold the remote BoostTM Walkie-Talkie button for
more than 2 seconds to end calls.
For BoostTM Walkie-Talkie calls, use the remote
BoostTM Walkie-Talkie button as you would the
BoostTM Walkie-Talkie button on your phone.
BoostTM Customer Care
You can contact BoostTM Customer Care 7 days a
week simply by dialing 611 from your i415 phone,
or by calling 1-888-BOOST-4U (1-888-266-7848).
Our BoostTM Customer Care team will assist you in
answering all your questions. Or, visit
www.boostmobile.com for a variety of BoostTM
Customer Care services online.
You'll want to keep this information handy so that
you can replace the battery and power up your
phone should the representative need you to
access other information on it during your call.
Before you contact BoostTM Customer Care for
service or to resolve an issue, be sure to have your
BoostTM Personal Telephone Number, your model
number (located on your phone underneath the
battery), and the ID number printed on your SIM
card. You’ll want to record these numbers, and
keep them handy, so that you can replace the
battery prior to contacting BoostTM Customer Care.
Please have the following information available to
give to the representative who answers your
inquiry.
• Your Personal Telephone Number (PTN).
• Your phone's model number (located
underneath the battery).
• The ID numbers printed on your SIM.
133
Understanding Status
Messages
You may receive status messages under certain
conditions. Before contacting BoostTM Mobile
Customer Care, note the message, numeric code,
and the conditions under which it appeared. The
following table lists and describes the status
messages.
Note: When your battery door is closed, the
one-line display screen shows a
shortened version the status messages
displayed in the full-size screen. To see
complete status messages, open the
battery door.
Status
Messages
Message Description
User Not
Available
The phone that you called is either
busy, out of coverage, or turned off.
Please try again later.
User Busy in
Boost
Walkie-Talkie
call
The phone that you called is busy in a
BoostTM Walkie-Talkie.
User Busy in
Data
The phone that you called is busy
using BoostTM Mobile Wireless Web
services.
Service
Restricted
This service was restricted by BoostTM
Mobile, or this service was not
purchased.
Status
Messages
Message Description
Service Not
Available
You are either out of coverage or
having problems with provisioning.
Number Not in
Service
The number that you entered is not
valid.
System Busy
The system is experiencing heavy
traffic. Please try again later.
Please Try
Later
This service is temporarily not
available. Please try again later.
User Not
Authorized
The person that you called has not
purchased this service.
134
You have attempted to reach a
No Dispatch
TM
customer using One
Number Stored Boost Mobile
Touch BoostTM Walkie-Talkie, but there
is no BoostTM Walkie-Talkie number
stored in your recent calls list.
Service
Conflict
This service cannot be enabled
because an incompatible service has
already been turned on.
Status
Messages
Message Description
Status
Messages
Message Description
Please Try
Again
An error occurred. Please try again.
Insert SIM
SIM PIN
incorrect. Try
again.
You have entered an incorrect PIN
number.
Your SIM card is not being detected.
Please check to ensure that you have
inserted the SIM correctly into your
phone.
Check SIM
Card
Please check your SIM to make sure it
has been inserted properly.
Please Enter
Special Code
You have inserted a SIM that will not
work with a BoostTM Mobile phone.
Contact BoostTM Mobile Customer
Care if you believe this is a valid SIM.
Enter SIM PIN
Please enter your 4- to 8- digit SIM
PIN code.
Enter Unlock
Code
Auto Phone Lock is activated. Enter
you unlock code.
Hardware
Failure
A problem occurred in your phone’s
camera. If this error occurs, contact
your service provider.
Resource Not
Available
Your phone’s camera is temporarily
unavailable for user. Please try again
later.
New Browser
Message
Memory Full!
Warns of low memory for Web Alerts.
Scanning for
Satellites
Searching for GPS satellites.
Unable to
Locate Sats
Could not find GPS satellites.
A fault was detected with your phone.
Self Check
note the error code
Error + Number If this error recurs,TM
and contact Boost Mobile Customer
Code
Care.
Self Check Fail An operational fault was detected with
+ Number Code your phone. Note the numeric code,
turn your phone off, and contact
BoostTM Mobile Customer Care.
PIN Blocked
Call Your
Provider
The incorrect PIN was entered three
consecutive times. You will be unable
to place or receive calls on your
phone. Contact Boost TM Mobile
Customer Care to have them obtain
the PIN Unblocking Key (PUK) code.
135
Understanding Status Messages
Status
Messages
Message Description
For Update
Visit:
Directs you to update GPS satellite
almanac data.
Technical Error A problem occurred in your phone’s
GPS circuitry. If this error occurs,
contact BoostTM Mobile Customer
Care.
136
Boost MobileTM Terms
and Conditions of
Service
TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF PREPAID
SERVICE: PLEASE READ THESE TERMS AND
CONDITIONS CAREFULLY. THEY CONSTITUTE
A BINDING AGREEMENT (the “Agreement”)
BETWEEN YOU AND BOOST MOBILE.
accompanying the Activation Guide, the terms and
conditions of the then-current applicable
Service/Subscriber Agreement will control. The
Service is provided to you through the Company as
agent for, and using the Digital Mobile Network (the
“System”) of, Nextel Communications, Inc. and its
affiliates and subsidiaries (collectively, “Nextel”).
All rights and protections afforded to the Company
by this Agreement are also afforded to Nextel
through Nextel’s principal-agent relationship with
the Company.
You (“Customer”) accept the terms of this
Agreement (a) by calling to activate BOOST
MOBILESM wireless communications services
(“Service”), (b) by purchasing BOOST MOBILE
wireless communications equipment (the
“Equipment”) or Service or replenishing your
airtime through boostmobile.com, or (c) by signing
this Agreement, whichever applies. By using the
Equipment, you subscribe to the Service provided
by Boost Mobile (sometimes “Company”). If you
have not signed a printed copy of this Agreement
and do not accept these terms, do not activate your
phone; you may return your phone for a full refund,
within 10 days of purchase, to the retail store
where you purchased it. Should there be any
conflict between the terms and conditions below,
and the terms and conditions of any applicable
Service/Subscriber Agreement between Customer
and Company covering the Equipment
1. SERVICE ACTIVATION - To activate the
Service and the call credits in your BOOST
MOBILE Activation Guide, you must call our free
automated service number before the date shown.
Remember that by calling this number to activate
your service, you are agreeing to these Terms and
Conditions of Prepaid Service. By activating the
Service you also authorize Company to exchange
with its related business entities, contractors or
agents who may be involved in providing the
Service, any customer information you may have
provided to Company that is necessary for these
related businesses, contractors, and entities to
assist the Company in providing the Service.
Company may suspend or cancel the Service at
any time without notice if: (i) there are reasonable
grounds to suspect the information provided by
Customer to Boost Mobile or its agent for user
registration or when you activated your Service,
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Boost MobileTM Terms and Conditions of Service
was incomplete or incorrect or if there has been
fraud or misuse by you in relation to the Service; (ii)
you breach any of the terms or conditions in this
Agreement; or (iii) you do anything which in the
Company’s opinion, may cause damage to the
System. In addition, Service may be suspended,
changed or terminated without notice.
2. CALL CREDITS – Your call credits are valid for
the Call Credit Validity Period, i.e., from the date of
their activation, until the call credit expiration date.
Refer to your rate plan table for details. You may
purchase additional RE-BOOSTTM Cards at any
time but you must activate them by calling the
designated BOOST MOBILE Customer Care
number before the expiration date of the
RE-BOOST Card. If you don’t use your call credits
or replenish your service within the Call Credit
Validity Period, your call credits will expire and your
mobile number will be withdrawn at the end of a
60-day Grace Period. There is a limit of $300 in
call credits that may be aggregated on your service
at any time. RE-BOOST Cards can be used once
only. Call credits are not transferable or
redeemable for cash.
3. SIM CARDS – The BOOST MOBILE pre-paid
SIM card remains the property of Boost Mobile at
all times. Should your BOOST MOBILE pre-paid
SIM card or RE-BOOST Card(s) be lost or stolen,
138
Boost Mobile will be under no obligation to replace
them or compensate you. If Boost Mobile does
choose to replace your SIM card, you may be
charged a replacement fee.
4. USE OF SERVICE – Customer agrees to
comply with all statutes, rules and regulations
applicable to Customer, including all applicable
rules of the Federal Communications Commission
(the “FCC”). Customer will not use the Service for
any unlawful purpose. Customer will not use the
Service in aircraft or in motor vehicles in violation
of law, regulation or ordinance. Customer
acknowledges and agrees that all future purchases
of Company Services and Equipment by customer
shall be governed by the terms and conditions
contained herein unless Customer and Company
enter into a subsequent Service/Subscriber
Agreement. Company may change this Agreement
at any time. Any changes are effective when
Company provides Customer with written notice
stating the effective date of the change(s). If
Customer elects to use the Services or make any
payment to Company on or after the effective date
of the changes, Customer is deemed to have
accepted the change(s). If Customer does not
accept the changes, Customer may terminate
Services as of the effective date of the changes.
5. CUSTOMER MOBILE DIGITAL EQUIPMENT –
Customer must have a Company approved
handset or device and must be a BOOST MOBILE
Service customer to access the Service. Company
is not responsible for the installation, operation,
quality of transmission, or maintenance of the
Equipment. Any change in Service or Equipment
may require additional programming or Equipment
or changes to assigned codes or numbers that may
require programming fees. Company reserves the
right to change or remove assigned codes and/or
numbers when such change is reasonably
necessary in the conduct of its business.
Customer does not have any proprietary interest in
such codes or numbers. Although Federal and
state laws may make it illegal for third parties to
listen in on service, complete privacy cannot be
guaranteed. Company shall not be liable to
Customer or to any third party for any
eavesdropping on or interception of
communications from Company’s System.
6. RATES, CHARGES, AND PAYMENT – You will
be charged for your use of the Service in
accordance with the terms of the BOOST MOBILE
Rate Plan, as found in your BOOST MOBILE
handset kit or online at www.boostmobile.com.
You may request a copy of this document from
Boost Mobile at any time. Customer agrees to pay
Company, on a prepay basis, for charges by
Company for the Service. Customer
acknowledges that chargeable time for telephone
calls and BOOST Walkie-Talkie call transmissions
originated by a handset begins when a connection
is established with Company facilities. A new
BOOST Walkie-Talkie call is initiated by a call
participant if that participant responds more than
six (6) seconds after the other party finishes its
BOOST MOBILETM CONNECT transmission.
Customer accepts responsibility for Airtime
charges from incoming telephone calls to the
handset from the time that Customer responds to
the call. Service charges may apply to some
service options when Customer calls the BOOST
MOBILETM Customer Service number
1-888-BOOST-4U (1-888-266-7848). If Customer
disputes any Service charges, Customer must
submit a written explanation within forty five (45)
days from the date Company debits Customer’s
account for the disputed Service. If Company
determines that an error was made with respect to
any disputed Service charges, Company shall
credit Customer’s account in the amount of the
error. If Customer does not pay the amount in
dispute owed to Company, Company may exercise
any remedies it may have under this Agreement for
non-payment of Service charges. Company
reserves the right to modify any and all elements of
the Service charges at any time by giving notice of
such changes to Customer. If Customer continues
to use the Service after the Company has provided
139
Boost MobileTM Terms and Conditions of Service
such notice, Customer will be deemed to have
accepted the changes, and such changes will be
effective immediately upon Customer’s use of the
Service following notice of the changes, unless the
Company’s communication indicates a later
effective date. If Customer does not accept the
changes, Customer must immediately cease all
use of the Service.
7. BOOST MOBILE WIRELESS WEB SERVICES
– BOOST MOBILE Wireless Web Services,
consisting of certain applications such as Internet,
email, data and other wireless information services
(the “Applications”) are part of the Services that
can be obtained through Company. Certain
Applications offered through Company or
authorized third parties may be compatible with the
Equipment and/or the Service offered by
Company. Customer acknowledges and agrees
that there is no guarantee or assurance that the
Applications are compatible, or will continue to be
compatible, with Company’s System or any of its
Equipment or Service offerings. Such compatibility
shall not be construed as an endorsement of a
particular Application or a commitment on the part
of Company that Application(s) will continue to be
compatible with the System, Equipment or Service
for any period of time. Company reserves the right,
in its sole discretion, to disable or discontinue any
Application for any reason. Use of BOOST
MOBILE Wireless Web Services requires a
140
wireless Internet compatible phone, and is subject
to any storage, memory or other Equipment
limitation. Only certain Internet sites may be
accessed, and certain BOOST MOBILE Wireless
Web Services may not be available in all Company
Service areas.
8. APPLICATION CUSTOMER CARE AND
SUPPORT – Customer acknowledges and agrees
that in most cases, the developer of an Application
is responsible for providing customer care and
Application support to all Customers using the
Application. In the event Customer contacts
Company customer care with a problem
concerning the use of an Application, Customer
may be referred to the Application developer’s
customer care, and Company shall have no
obligation to support such Application.
9. CONTENT; INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
RIGHTS – Company is not a publisher of the third
party content that Customer may access from time
to time through BOOST MOBILE Wireless Web
Services; therefore, Company is not responsible
for the content provided by such third parties,
including but not limited to statements, opinions,
graphics, photos, music, services and other
information (“Content”), and accessed by
Customer through Boost Mobile Wireless Web
Services. Company gives no guarantee or
assurance as to the currency, accuracy,
completeness or utility of Content obtained through
BOOST MOBILE Wireless Web Services.
Company, Content providers and others have
proprietary interests in certain Content. Customer
shall not reproduce, broadcast, distribute, sell,
publish, commercially exploit or otherwise
disseminate such Content in any manner, or permit
others to do so, without the prior written consent of
Company, Content providers, or others with
proprietary interests in such Content, as
applicable.
10. RISK OF LOSS: INSURANCE – Upon
Customer’s acceptance of delivery of the
Equipment, all risk of loss, damage, theft, or
destruction to the Equipment shall be borne by the
Customer. No such loss, damage, theft, or
destruction of the Equipment, in whole or part, shall
impair the obligations of Customer hereunder,
including, without limitation, responsibility for the
payment of Service Charges due hereunder.
11. TAXES, FEES, SURCHARGES &
ASSESSMENTS – Customer is responsible for all
federal, state, and local taxes, fees, surcharges,
and other assessments (collectively, “Charges”)
that are imposed on telecommunications services,
other services, and equipment or that are
measured by gross receipts from the sale of
telecommunications services and/or equipment.
Such Charges shall include, but are not limited to:
excise taxes; sales and transaction taxes; utility
taxes; regulatory fees and assessments; universal
service assessments, telephone relay service
(TRS) assessments; recoveries or similar charges.
Customer shall be responsible for such Charges
regardless of whether the Charge is imposed upon
the sale of equipment or services, upon Customer,
or upon Company. If any such Charge is
determined to be applicable and has not been paid
by Customer before Customer accepts delivery of
equipment, Customer shall pay Company the full
amount of any such Charge no later than ten (10)
days after receipt of the invoice therefor.
12. COVERAGE AREA – Local Dispatch (BOOST
Walkie-Talkie), cellular calling, BOOST MOBILE
Wireless Web Services, and respective coverage
areas for these Services are subject to change at
any time at the sole discretion of Company.
13. DEFAULT / TERMINATION - If you breach
any representation to Company or fail to perform
any of the promises you made in this Agreement,
you will be in default and Company may, without
notice to you, suspend Service and/or terminate
this Agreement, in addition to all other remedies
available to us. You agree to pay all costs
including reasonable attorneys fees, collection
fees, and court costs Company may incur in
enforcing this Agreement through any appeals.
141
Boost MobileTM Terms and Conditions of Service
14. LIMITATION AND CONDITION OF LIABILITY;
INDEMNITY - Company does not assume and
shall have no liability for (i) failure to deliver the
Equipment within a specified time period; (ii)
unavailability or delays in delivery of the Equipment
or the Services; (iii) damage due directly or
indirectly to causes beyond the control of
Company, including, but not limited to acts of God,
acts of the public enemy, acts of the government,
acts or failure to act of the Customer, its agents,
employees or subcontractors, fires, floods,
epidemics, quarantine restrictions, corrosive
substances in the air or other hazardous
environmental conditions, strikes, freight
embargoes, inability to obtain materials or
services, commotion, war, unusually severe
weather conditions or default of Company’s
subcontractors whether or not due to any such
causes; or (iv) the use of BOOST MOBILE
Wireless Web Services, including but not limited to
the accuracy or utility of any information acquired
from the Internet through BOOST MOBILE
Wireless Web Services; or Internet Services,
Content or Applications whether or not supported
by Company. Without limiting the foregoing, the
Company’s sole liability for Service disruption,
whether caused by the negligence of the Company
or otherwise, is limited to a credit allowance not
exceeding an amount equal to the proportionate
charge to the Customer for the period of Service
142
disruption. EXCEPT AS OTHERWISE SET
FORTH IN THE PRECEDING SENTENCE, IN NO
EVENT WILL THE COMPANY BE LIABLE FOR
ACTUAL, CONSEQUENTIAL, INCIDENTAL,
SPECIAL OR OTHER INDIRECT DAMAGES
ARISING OUT OF THE SERVICES, WHETHER
CAUSED BY ITS NEGLIGENCE OR
OTHERWISE, NOR FOR ECONOMIC LOSS,
PERSONAL INJURIES OR PROPERTY
DAMAGES SUSTAINED BY THE CUSTOMER
OR ANY THIRD PARTIES ARISING OUT OF THE
SERVICES. UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES
WILL NEXTEL, IN CONJUNCTION WITH WHICH
THE COMPANY PROVIDES THE SERVICES, BE
LIABLE TO CUSTOMER FOR ANY DAMAGES,
OF ANY KIND WHATSOVER, REGARDLESS OF
THE FORM OF ACTION OR CAUSE OF ACTION,
ARISING OUT OF THE SERVICES. CUSTOMER
IRREVOCABLY WAIVES ANY CLAIM YOU
MIGHT OTHERWISE HAVE AGAINST NEXTEL
ARISING OUT OF THE SERVICES AND
COVENANTS NOT TO MAKE OR BRING ANY
CLAIM OF ANY KIND AGAINST NEXTEL
ARISING OUT OF THE SERVICES. Customer
agrees to indemnify, defend, and hold Company
and Nextel harmless from any Customer violations
of FCC rules and regulations or Customer violation
of any statutes, ordinances or laws of any local,
state, or federal public authority. The terms of this
Section 14 will survive any termination or
expiration of this Agreement
15. RESOLUTION OF DISPUTES -. PLEASE
READ THIS SECTION CAREFULLY. IT
AFFECTS RIGHTS THAT YOU MAY
OTHERWISE HAVE. IT PROVIDES FOR
RESOLUTION OF MOST DISPUTES THROUGH
ARBITRATION INSTEAD OF COURT TRIALS
AND CLASS ACTIONS. ARBITRATION IS FINAL
AND BINDING AND SUBJECT TO ONLY VERY
LIMITED REVIEW BY A COURT. THIS
ARBITRATION CLAUSE SHALL SURVIVE
TERMINATION OR EXPIRATION OF THIS
AGREEMENT.
A. ARBITRATION PROCEDURES. YOU
MUST FIRST PRESENT ANY CLAIM OR
DISPUTE TO US BY CONTACTING BOOST
MOBILE CUSTOMER CARE, IN WRITING, TO
ALLOW US THE OPPURTUNITY TO
RESOLVE THE DISPUTE. You may invoke
arbitration if your claim or dispute is not resolved
within 60 days after we receive your detailed
written description of the dispute or claim and
the circumstances giving rise to it. The
arbitration of any dispute or claim shall be
conducted in accordance with the Wireless
Industry Arbitration rules (“WIA Rules”) of the
American Arbitration Association (“AAA”), as
modified by this Agreement. You and we agree
that this Agreement evidences a transaction in
interstate commerce and the arbitration will be
interpreted and enforced in accordance with the
WIA Rules and the laws of the Commonwealth
of Virginia. The arbitration will be conducted at a
location in Reston, Virginia, to be designated by
the Company.
B. COST OF ARBITRATION. All administrative
fees and expenses of an Arbitration will be
divided equally between you and Company. In
all arbitrations, each party will bear the expense
of its own counsel, experts, witnesses and
preparation and presentation of evidence at the
arbitration.
C. WAIVER OF PUNITIVE DAMAGE CLAIMS
AND CLASS ACTION. By this Agreement, both
Customer and Company are waiving certain
rights to litigate disputes in court. If for any
reason the arbitration clause is deemed
inapplicable or invalid, Customer and Company
both waive, to the fullest extent allowed by law,
any right we might otherwise have to recover
punitive or exemplary damages and any right to
pursue any claims on a class or consolidated
basis or in a representative capacity.
143
Boost MobileTM Terms and Conditions of Service
16. COMPLETE
AGREEMENT/SEVERABILITY/WAIVER – This
Agreement sets forth all of the agreements
between the parties concerning the Services and
purchase of the Equipment, and there are no oral
or written agreements between them other than as
set forth in this Agreement. No amendment or
addition to this Agreement shall be binding upon
this Company unless it is in writing and signed by
both parties (and, in the case of the Company, by
an officer of the Company). Should any provision
of this Agreement be found illegal or in
contravention of the law, such provision shall be
considered null and void but the remainder of this
Agreement shall not be affected thereby. The
failure of Company, at any time to require the
performance by Customer of the provisions of this
Agreement shall not affect in any way the right to
require such performances at any later time, nor
shall the waiver by Company of a breach of any
provision hereof be taken or held to be a waiver of
compliance with or breach of any other provision or
a continuing waiver of such provision.
17. ASSIGNMENT/RESALE/GOVERNING LAW –
This Agreement may be freely assigned by
Company to any successor of it or any other firm or
entity capable of performing its obligations
hereunder, and upon any such assignment,
Company shall be released from all obligations to
Customer. Customer may not assign this
144
Agreement, or resell the services that are subject
to this Agreement without prior written consent of
Company. Subject to the restrictions contained
herein, this Agreement shall bind and inure to the
benefit of the successors and permitted assigns of
the parties hereto. The laws of the Commonwealth
of Virginia, without application of its conflicts of
laws principles, shall govern this Agreement.
18. NOTICE REGARDING USE OF SERVICE
FOR 911 OR OTHER EMERGENCY CALLS – The
Service provided hereunder does not interact with
911 and other emergency services in the same
manner as landline telephone service. Depending
on the circumstances of a particular call, the
Service provided hereunder may not be able to
identify your location to emergency services and
you may not always be connected to the
appropriate emergency services provider.
Additionally, the provision of 911 or other
emergency services may be conditioned on
payment of amounts to the governmental
authorities who implement or coordinate access to
such services, and Customer agrees that
Company may apportion and pass through such
amounts to Customer, which shall be paid by
Customer when due, in connection with
Customer’s access to such 911 or other
emergency services, where available.
CUSTOMER AGREES TO HOLD COMPANY AND
NEXTEL HARMLESS AGAINST ANY AND ALL
CLAIMS, DEMANDS, ACTIONS, OR CAUSES OF
ACTION (INCLUDING ALL ACTIONS BY THIRD
PARTIES) ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR
ATTEMPTED USE OF THE COMPANY’S
SERVICE TO ACCESS 911 OR OTHER
EMERGENCY SERVICES.
19. NO WARRANTY (SERVICE) – NEITHER
COMPANY NOR NEXTEL MAKES ANY
WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,
INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY
IMPLIED WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY
OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
TO CUSTOMER IN CONNECTION WITH ITS USE
OF THE SERVICE. IN NO EVENT SHALL
COMPANY OR NEXTEL BE LIABLE FOR
INCIDENTAL, CONSEQUENTIAL OR OTHER
INDIRECT DAMAGES TO THE FULL EXTENT
THE SAME MAY BE DISCLAIMED BY LAW.
CUSTOMER ACKNOWLEDGES THAT SERVICE
INTERRUPTIONS WILL OCCUR FROM TIME TO
TIME, AND AGREES TO HOLD COMPANY AND
NEXTEL HARMLESS FOR ALL SUCH
INTERRUPTIONS.
20. NO WARRANTY (EQUIPMENT) – NEITHER
COMPANY NOR NEXTEL MAKES ANY
WARRANTIES OR REPRESENTATIONS OF ANY
KIND, STATUTORY, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, TO
CUSTOMER OR TO ANY OTHER PURCHASER
OF THIS EQUIPMENT. WITHOUT LIMITING THE
FOREGOING, NEITHER COMPANY NOR
NEXTEL MAKES ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
CUSTOMER HEREBY WAIVES, AS AGAINST
COMPANY AND NEXTEL ALL OTHER
WARRANTIES, GUARANTEES, CONDITIONS,
OR LIABILITIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,
ARISING BY LAW OR OTHERWISE. IN NO
EVENT SHALL COMPANY, OR NEXTEL BE
LIABLE FOR CONSEQUENTIAL, SPECIAL, OR
INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, WHETHER OR NOT
OCCASIONED BY THEIR NEGLIGENCE AND
INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, LIABILITY
FOR ANY LOSS OR DAMAGE RESULTING
FROM THE INTERRUPTION OR FAILURE IN
THE OPERATION OF ANY EQUIPMENT SOLD
OR OTHERWISE PROVIDED HEREUNDER.
THERE ARE NO WARRANTIES THAT EXTEND
BEYOND THE DESCRIPTION CONTAINED
HEREIN. CUSTOMER ASSUMES THE ENTIRE
RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND
PERFORMANCE OF THE EQUIPMENT.
UNLESS OTHERWISE AGREED BY COMPANY,
IF THE EQUIPMENT PROVES DEFECTIVE, THE
COSTS OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING AND
REPAIR WILL BE BORNE BY CUSTOMER.
145
Boost MobileTM Terms and Conditions of Service
21. DEFINITIONS – For purposes of this
Agreement: 1) “Call Credit Validity Period” means
the number of days, from the date of call credit
activation until the date of call credit expiration, set
out in the relevant rate plan; 2) “RE-BOOST Card”
means the Boost Mobile card containing additional
call credits which may be purchased from
participating outlets or the voucher number and
expiration date provided to customers when
additional call credits are purchased without a card
being provided, as applicable; 3) “Grace Period”
means the 60 day period commencing on the date
of Call Credit expiration, and ending on the date of
account cancellation.
146
Safety and General
Information
IMPORTANT INFORMATION ON SAFE AND
EFFICIENT OPERATION.
READ THIS INFORMATION BEFORE USING
YOUR INTEGRATED MULTI-SERVICE
PORTABLE RADIO.
RF Operational
Characteristics
Your radio product contains a radio frequency
transmitter to convey the information you wish to
send as well as occasional automatic signals used
to sustain connection to the wireless network, and
a receiver which enables you to receive
communication and connection information from
the network.
Portable Radio Product
Operation and EME Exposure
Your Motorola radio product is designed to comply
with the following national and international
standards and guidelines regarding exposure of
human beings to radio frequency electromagnetic
energy (EME):
• United States Federal Communications
Commission, Code of Federal Regulations; 47
CFR part 2 sub-part J.
• American National Standards Institute (ANSI) /
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
(IEEE). C95. 1-1992.
• Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
(IEEE). C95. 1-1999 Edition.
• International Commission on Non-Ionizing
Radiation Protection (ICNIRP) 1998.
• Ministry of Health (Canada). Safety Code 6.
Limits of Human Exposure to Radiofrequency
Electromagnetic Fields in the Frequency Range
from 3 kHz to 300 GHz, 1999.
• Australian Communications Authority
Radiocommunications (Electromagnetic
Radiation - Human Exposure) Standard 2003.
• ANATEL, Brasil Regulatory Authority, Resolution
303 (July 2, 2002) "Regulation of the limitation of
exposure to electrical, magnetic, and
electromagnetic fields in the radio frequency
range between 9 kHz and 300 GHz."
"Attachment to Resolution 303 from July 2,
2002."
147
Safety and General Information
To assure optimal radio product performance
and make sure human exposure to radio
frequency electromagnetic energy is within the
guidelines set forth in the above standards,
always adhere to the following procedures:
Phone Operation
When placing or receiving a phone call, hold your
radio product as you would a wireline telephone.
Speak directly into the microphone.
Two-way radio operation
Your radio product has been designed and tested
to comply with national and international standards
and guidelines regarding human exposure to RF
electromagnetic energy, when operated in the
two-way mode (at the face, or at the abdomen
when using an audio accessory) at usage factors
of up to 50% talk/50% listen.
Transmit no more than the rated duty factor of 50%
of the time. To transmit (talk), push the
Push-To-Talk (PTT) button. To receive calls,
release the PTT button. Transmitting 50% of the
time or less, is important because this radio
generates measurable RF energy only when
transmitting (in terms of measuring for standards
compliance).
148
When using your radio product as a
traditional two-way radio, hold the
radio product in a vertical position
with the microphone one to two
inches (2.5 to 5 cm) away from the
lips.
Body-worn operation
To maintain compliance with FCC RF exposure
guidelines, if you wear a radio product on your
body when transmitting, always place the radio
product in a Motorola approved clip, holder,
holster, case or body harness for this product.
Use of non-Motorola-approved accessories may
exceed FCC RF exposure guidelines. If you do
not use a Motorola approved body-worn
accessory and are not using the radio product
in the intended use positions along side the
head in the phone mode or in front of the face
in the two-way radio mode, then ensure the
antenna and the radio product are kept the
following minimum distances from the body
when transmitting
• Phone or Two-way radio mode: one inch (2.5
cm)
• Data operation using any data feature with or
without an accessory cable: one inch (2.5
cm)
Portable Radio Product Operation and EME Exposure
Antenna Care
Use only the supplied or an approved
replacement antenna. Unauthorized antennas,
modifications, or attachments could damage the
radio product and may violate FCC regulations.
DO NOT hold the antenna when the radio
product is “IN USE”. Holding the antenna affects
call quality and may cause the radio product to
operate at a higher power level than needed.
Approved Accessories
For a list of approved Motorola accessories call
1-800-453-0920, or visit our website at
www.motorola.com/iden.
ALL MODELS WITH FCC ID AZ489FT5845 MEET 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 the emission
limits for exposure to radiofrequency (RF) energy set by
the Federal Communications Commission of the U.S.
Government. 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 and health.
The exposure standard for wireless mobile phones
employs a unit of measurement known as the Specific
Absorption Rate, or SAR. The SAR limit set by the FCC is
1.6W/kg.1 Tests for SAR are conducted using standard
operating positions reviewed by the FCC with the phone
transmitting at its highest certified power level in all tested
frequency bands. Although the SAR is determined at the
highest certified power level, the actual SAR level of the
phone while operating can be well below the maximum
value. This is because the phone is designed to operate at
multiple power levels so as to use only the power required
to reach the network. In general, the closer you are to a
wireless base station antenna, the lower the power output.
Before a phone model is available for sale to the public, it
must be tested and certified to the FCC that is does not
exceed the limit established by the government-adopted
requirement for safe exposure. The tests are performed in
positions and locations (e.g., at the ear and worn on the
body) as required by the FCC for each model. The highest
SAR value for this model phone when tested for use at the
ear is 1.45 W/kg and when tested on the body, as
described in this user guide, is 1.23 W/kg during packet
data transmission. (Body-worn measurements differ
among phone models, depending upon available
accessories and FCC requirements.)2
While there may be differences between the SAR levels of
various phones and at various positions, they all meet the
government requirement for safe exposure.
149
Safety and General Information
The FCC has granted an Equipment Authorization for this
model phone with all reported SAR levels evaluated as in
compliance with the FCC RF exposure guidelines. SAR
information on this model phone is on file with the FCC
and can be found under the Display Grant section of
http://www.fcc.gov/oet/fccid after searching on FCC ID
AZ489FT5845.
Additional information on Specific Absorption Rates (SAR)
can be found on the Cellular Telecommunications Industry
Association (CTIA) web-site at http://www.wow-com.com.
In the United States and Canada, the SAR limit for
mobile phones used by the public is 1.6 watts/kg (W/kg)
averaged over one gram of tissue. The standard
incorporates a substantial margin of safety to give
additional protection for the public and to account for any
variations in measurements.
2 The SAR information reported to the FCC includes the
FCC-accepted Motorola testing protocol, assessment
procedure, and measurement uncertainty range for this
product.
150
Electro Magnetic
Interference/Compatibility
Note: Nearly every electronic device is
susceptible to electromagnetic
interference (EMI) if inadequately
shielded, designed or otherwise
configured for electromagnetic
compatibility.
Facilities
To avoid electromagnetic interference and/or
compatibility conflicts, turn off your radio product in
any facility where posted notices instruct you to do
so. Hospitals or health care facilities may be using
equipment that is sensitive to external RF energy.
Aircraft
When instructed to do so, turn off your radio
product when on board an aircraft. Any use of a
radio product must be in accordance with
applicable regulations per airline crew instructions.
Medical Devices
Medical Devices
Other Medical Devices
Pacemakers
If you use any other personal medical device,
consult the manufacturer of your device to
determine if it is adequately shielded from RF
energy. Your physician may be able to assist you
in obtaining this information.
The Advanced Medical Technology Association
(AdvaMed) recommends that a minimum
separation of 6 inches (15 cm) be maintained
between a handheld wireless radio product and a
pacemaker. These recommendations are
consistent with those of the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration.
Persons with pacemakers should:
• ALWAYS keep the radio product more than 6
inches (15 cm) from their pacemaker when the
radio product is turned ON.
• Not carry the radio product in a breast pocket.
• Use the ear opposite the pacemaker to minimize
the potential for interference.
• Turn the radio product OFF immediately if you
have any reason to suspect that interference is
taking place.
Use While Driving
Check the laws and regulations on the use of radio
products in the area where you drive. Always obey
them.
When using the radio product while driving, please:
• Give full attention to driving and to the road.
• Use hands-free operation, if available.
• Pull off the road and park before making or
answering a call if driving conditions so require.
Hearing Aids
Some digital wireless radio products may interfere
with some hearing aids. In the event of such
interference, you may want to consult your hearing
aid manufacturer to discuss alternatives.
151
Safety and General Information
Operational Warnings
For Vehicles with an Air
Bag
Do not place a portable radio product in the area
over the air bag or in the air bag deployment area.
Air bags inflate with great force. If a portable radio
is placed in the air bag deployment area and the air
bag inflates, the radio product may be propelled
with great force and cause serious injury to
occupants of the vehicle.
Potentially Explosive Atmospheres
Turn off your radio product prior to entering any
area with a potentially explosive atmosphere,
unless it is a radio product type especially qualified
for use in such areas as “Intrinsically Safe” (for
example, Factory Mutual, CSA, or UL approved).
Do not remove, install, or charge batteries in such
areas. Sparks in a potentially explosive
atmosphere can cause an explosion or fire
resulting in bodily injury or even death.
Note: The areas with potentially explosive
atmospheres referred to above include
fueling areas such as below decks on
boats, fuel or chemical transfer or
storage facilities, areas where the air
contains chemicals or particles, such
152
as grain, dust or metal powders, and
any other area where you would
normally be advised to turn off your
vehicle engine. Areas with potentially
explosive atmospheres are often but
not always posted.
Blasting Caps and Areas
To avoid possible interference with blasting
operations, turn off your radio product when you
are near electrical blasting caps, in a blasting area,
or in areas posted: “Turn off two-way radio”. Obey
all signs and instructions.
Operational Cautions
Batteries
All batteries can cause property damage and/or
bodily injury, such as burns if a conductive material
such as jewelry, keys, or beaded chains touches
exposed terminals. The conductive material may
complete an electrical circuit (short circuit) and
become quite hot. Exercise care in handling any
charged battery, particularly when placing it inside
a pocket, purse, or other container with metal
objects. To reduce the risk of injury, batteries
should not be exposed to fire, disassembled, or
crushed.
Accessory Safety Information
Cleaning and Drying Considerations
Using a leather carry case may help protect the
surfaces and help prevent liquids (e.g., rain) from
entering into the interior of the radio product. This
product is not water proof, and exposing the unit to
liquids may result in permanent damage to the unit.
If your radio product interior gets wet, then do not
try to accelerate drying with the use of an oven or a
dryer as this will damage the radio product and
void the warranty. Instead, do the following:
1 Immediately power off the radio product.
2 Remove Battery and SIM card (if so equipped)
from radio product.
3 Shake excess liquid from radio product.
4 Place the radio product and battery in an area
that is at room temperature and has good air
flow.
5 Let the radio product, battery, and SIM card dry
for 72 hours before reconnecting the battery
and/or powering on the radio product.
If the radio product does not work after following
the steps listed above, contact your dealer for
servicing information.
Clean the external surfaces of the radio product
with a damp cloth, using a mild solution of
dishwashing detergent and water. Some
household cleaners may contain chemicals that
could seriously damage the radio product. Avoid
the use of any petroleum-based solvent cleaners.
Also, avoid applying liquids directly on the radio
product.
Accessory Safety Information
Important: Save these accessory safety
instructions.
• Before using any battery or battery charger, read
all the instructions for and cautionary markings
on (1) the battery, (2) the battery charger, which
may include a separate wall-mounted power
supply or transformer, and (3) the radio product
using the battery.
• Do not expose any battery charger to water,
rain, or snow as they are designed for indoor or
in-vehicle use only.
Warning: To reduce the risk of injury,
charge only the rechargeable batteries
described in “Battery” on page 4. Other
types of batteries may burst, causing
personal injury and damage.
153
Safety and General Information
• To reduce the risk of damage to the cord or plug,
pull by the plug rather than the cord when you
disconnect the battery charger from the power
source outlet.
• Do not operate any battery charger with a
damaged cord or plug — replace them
immediately.
• Battery chargers may become warm during
operation, but not hot. If it becomes hot to the
touch, unplug it from the power outlet
immediately and discontinue its use.
• Use of a non-recommended attachment to a
battery charger may result in a risk of fire,
electric shock, or injury to persons.
• Make sure the battery charger power cord is
located so that it will not be stepped on, tripped
over, or subjected to damage or stress.
• An extension cord should not be used with any
battery charger unless absolutely necessary.
Use of an improper extension cord could result
in a risk of fire and electric shock. If an extension
cord must be used, make sure that:
• The pins on the plug of the extension cord are
the same number, size, and shape as those
on the plug of the charger.
• The extension cord is properly wired and in
good electrical condition.
154
•
•
•
•
•
•
• The cord size is 18AWG for lengths up to 100
feet and 16AWG for lengths up to 150 feet.
Do not operate any battery charger if it has
received a sharp blow, has been dropped, or
has been damaged in any way; take it to a
qualified service technician.
Do not disassemble a battery charger; take it to
a qualified service technician when service or
repair is required. Incorrect reassembly may
result in a risk of electric shock or fire.
Maximum ambient temperature around the
power supply or transformer of any battery
charger should not exceed 40°C (104°F).
The output power from the power supply or
transformer must not exceed the rating given on
the Desktop Dual-Pocket Charger.
The disconnection from the line voltage is made
by unplugging the power supply from the AC
receptacle.
To reduce risk of electric shock, unplug any
battery charger from the outlet before attempting
any maintenance or cleaning.
For optimum charging performance, turn off the
radio product while charging it in any battery
charger.
MOTOROLA LIMITED
WARRANTY
Note: FOR IDEN SUBSCRIBER PRODUCTS,
ACCESSORIES AND SOFTWARE
PURCHASED IN THE UNITED STATES
OR CANADA
What Does this Warranty Cover?
Subject to the exclusions contained below,
Motorola, Inc. warrants its Motorola iDEN Digital
Mobile and Portable Handsets ("Products"),
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
Products, Accessories and Software
purchased by consumers in the United States
or Canada, which are accompanied by this
written warranty:
PRODUCTS COVERED
LENGTH OF
COVERAGE
Products as defined
above.
One (1) year from the
date of purchase by the
first consumer purchaser
of the product.
Accessories as defined One (1) year from the
above.
date of purchase by the
first consumer purchaser
of the product.
Products or
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.
Software as defined
Ninety (90) days from
above. Applies only to
the date of purchase.
physical defects in the
media that embodies the
copy of the software (e.g.
CD-ROM, or floppy disk).
155
MOTOROLA LIMITED WARRANTY
What is not covered? (Exclusions)
Normal Wear and Tear. Periodic maintenance,
repair and replacement of parts due to normal wear
and tear are excluded from coverage.
Ornamental Decorations. Ornamental
decorations such as emblems, graphics,
rhinestones, jewels, gemstones and their settings,
and other decorative elements, 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.
156
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,
including without limitation, software changes, 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, antennas, 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 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.
How to Obtain Warranty Service or Other
Information? To obtain service or information,
please call:
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.
Or visit us online at
http://www.motorola.com/iden/support
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.
Motorola iDEN Customer Services
1-800-453-0920 or 954-723-4910
TTY-877-483-2840
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.
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
157
MOTOROLA LIMITED WARRANTY
THE EXCLUSIVE REMEDY OF THE
CONSUMER, AND IS PROVIDED IN LIEU OF
ALL OTHER WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OF
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.
158
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.
Patent and Trademark
Information
© 2005 Boost Worldwide, Inc. All rights reserved.
BOOST, BOOST and Logo, BOOST MOBILE,
BOOST MOBILE and Logo, and the Logo are
trademarks and/or service marks of Boost
Worldwide, Inc.
©2005 Nextel Communications, Inc. NEXTEL®, the
NEXTEL logo®, NEXTEL. Done.TM, DIRECT
CONNECT®, GROUP CONNECTSM and NEXTEL
WORLDWIDE® are service marks, trademarks,
and/or registered trademarks owned by Nextel
Communications, Inc.
MOTOROLA, the Stylized M Logo and all other
trademarks indicated as such herein are
trademarks of Motorola, Inc. ® Reg. U.S. Pat. &
Tm. Off. © 2005 Motorola, Inc. All rights reserved.
Microsoft and Microsoft Internet Explorer are
registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation.
T9 is a trademark owned by Tegic
Communications.
All other product names or services mentioned in
this manual are the property of their respective
trademark owners.
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.
T9® Text Input Patent and Trademark Information
This product is covered by U.S. Pat. 5,818,437,
U.S. Pat. 5,953,541, U.S. Pat. 6,011,554 and other
patents pending.
159
Index
button 2
call timers 44
calls 19
calls, answering 20
calls, ending 20
number 9
number, viewing 9
numbers, dialing 19
options 127
setting One Touch 44
status messages 134
turning off One Touch 44
using One Touch 22, 44
Accessories 17
safety 153
Attachments 68
see also MMS messages,
attachments
Backlight 124, 126
Battery
care 6
charging 5
door 4
inserting 4
safety 152
Baud rate 129
Boost Mobile
Customer Care 133
voice mail 77
Wireless Web 86
Wireless Web service plan 86
Wireless Web, navigation 87
Boost Walkie-Talkie
160
Call alerts 24
deleting 25
queue 24
receiving 24
responding 24, 25
sending 24
sorting 25
viewing 25
Call forwarding 41
all calls 41
missed calls 41
off 41
Call Timers 44
Call Waiting
putting first call on hold 43
Calls
advanced features 43
Boost Walkie-Talkie 19, 20
Direct Connect 44
emergency 22
ending 20
entering number 20
from Datebook 117
from memo 40
from MMS messages 70
from recent calls 29
from SMS messages 84
international 43
receiving 20
redialing 21, 126
remote Boost Walkie-Talkie
132
Speed Dial 21
TTY, see TTY calls
Turbo Dial 21
voice name 21
Clock 126
Contacts 32
accessing 33
addressing MMS messages
62
capacity 37
choosing picture view 36
creating entries 33
creating MMS messages 61
deleting 37
icons 32
International numbers 38
receiving with Direct Send 27,
92
ring tones 32, 33, 34
searching 36
sending with Direct Send 91
showing all entries 37
SIM card 32
storing from Memo 40
storing from MMS messages
71
storing from recent calls 28
type 32
viewing in recent calls list 27
voice name 34
Datebook 113
deleting events 116
editing events 116
making calls from 117
reminders 117
setting up 118
viewing 113
Dialing codes
non-emergency numbers 47
telecommunications relay
service 47
Digital rights management , see
DRM
Direct Connect
One Touch 44
Direct Send 91
Contacts 91
My Info 91
Display
backlight 126
contrast 124, 126
options 10
screen 10
Drafts 57, 66
see also MMS messages,
drafts
icons 67
DRM 102
count-based usage 102
definition 102
deleting items 98, 103
expired items 103
java applications 98
managing items 102
renewing items 102
renewing license 102
time-based usage 102
viewing license information
102
Email 34, 46
messaging 52
receiving 53
sending 53
161
Index
Emergency calls 22
End key 3
Getting Started 2
GPS Enabled 104
almanac data 109
best results 107
emergency calls 23, 105
map software 111
PIN 128
privacy options 109
security 110
viewing location 106
GPS, see GPS Enabled
Handset, see phone
Headset 132
Icons
Contacts 32
drafts 67
Inbox 69
sent items 68
162
status 13
text entry 30
Idle screen 10
creating MMS messages 62
Inbox 57, 69
icons 69
International numbers 43
calling 43
storing 38
Internet, see Boost Mobile
Wireless Web
Java applications 96
deleting 98
DRM 98
memory 98
Keypad 3
locking 16, 128
Language 126
Lists, see menus
Memo 40
calling from 40
creating 40
editing 40
storing to Contacts 40
viewing 40
Memory
Java applications 98
MMS messages 75
pictures 56, 88
ring tones 56
voice records 95
Menu key 3, 11
Menus 11
context-sensitive 3, 11
main menu 12
Message center
MMS messages 69
Message notifications 50
setting options 50
Messages 50
see also Two-Way messages,
SMS messages, and MMS
messages
email 52
reading 53, 84
receiving 50
sending 51
text and numeric 51
Web 51
Messaging, see Messages,
Two-Way messages, SMS
messages, and MMS
messages
MMS messages
attachments 68, 69, 72
calls from 70
creating 57
deleting 68, 70, 74, 76
drafts 66
embedded objects 68
forwarding 67, 70
going to website 72
Inbox 69
locking 70
memory 75
message center 69
quick notes 63, 73
receiving 68
replying 70
sending 57, 66, 67
sent items 67
setting up 73
storing to Contacts 71
Multimedia messages 57
Multimedia messages see MMS
Mute 22
My Info
receiving 26, 92
sending with Direct Send 91
Navigation key 3
Non-emergency numbers 47
Over-the-air programming 9
Over-the-Air Radio Service
Software (OARSS) 9
Passwords 128
voice mail 78
Patent information 159
Pauses
dialing 43
storing 37
Phone 2, 10
locking 128
modem 45
off 8
on 8
only 129
setting up 3
Pictures
attaching to messages 65
deleting from messages 72
inserting in messages 64
memory 56, 88
saving from messages 72
setting picture view in
Contacts 36
setting picture view in recent
calls 28
viewing 88
Profiles 119
PUK code 16
163
Index
Quick notes 63, 73
see also MMS messages,
Quick notes
Radio frequency 147
Recent Calls 26
Recent calls 26, 29
addressing MMS messages
63
call alerts 26
contact information 27
contents 26
creating MMS messages 62
deleting 28
display time 129
setting picture view 28
storing to Contacts 28
viewing 27
viewing My Info 26
Redialing 21, 126
Ring tones 54
attaching to messages 65
deleting 56
164
deleting from messages 72
downloading 56
in Contacts 32, 33, 34
inserting in messages 64
memory 56
off 54
saving from messages 72
setting 54
setting in Contacts 55
vibrate 54
viewing assigned 55
Ringer 123
see also Ring tones
off 123
Safety 147
accessory 153
battery 152
electromagnetic interference
150
medical devices 151
radio frequency 147
Send key 3
Sent items 57, 67
see also MMS messages,
sent items
icons 68
Service activation 8
Settings 125
advanced 128
DC/GC (Boost Walkie-Talkie)
options 127
display/info 126
personalize 127
phone calls 126
reset defaults 129
security 128
volume 127
Shortcuts 130
SIM 6, 14
Contacts 32
PIN 14, 128
PIN requirement 14
PIN, changing 15
PIN, unblocking 15, 16
PUK code 16
SIM card
inserting 7
removing 7
SMS messages 84
calling from 84
Speakerphone 22
Speed Dial 21, 33, 34
Status messages 134
TTY devices 48
Turbo Dial 21
Two-Way messages 52
sending 51
Web 51
T9 Text Input, see text entry
TDD/TTY devices 48
Telecommunications relay
service 47
Text and numeric messages
see SMS messages
Text display area 10
Text entry 30
database 30
icons 30
mode 30
Word mode 30
Trademark information 159
TTY calls 46
baud rate 47
making 46
mode 46
on 46
Voice mail 51
changing password 78
greetings 78
group lists 82
message forwarding 83
playing messages 77
receiving 51
sending calls to 20, 51
setting up 10, 77
Voice name 21, 33
creating 34
Voice records 93
attaching to messages 66
deleting from messages 72
inserting in messages 64
locking 94
memory 95
saving from messages 72
Waits
dialing 43
storing 37
Web 3
messaging 51
secure data 86
White Page listings 49
Word mode 30
Yellow Page listings 49
165

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