Samsung Electronics Co SCHN380 Single-Mode Cellular Phone (CDMA) User Manual SCH N380 FCC Final

Samsung Electronics Co Ltd Single-Mode Cellular Phone (CDMA) SCH N380 FCC Final

Users Manual

* Some of the contents of this manual may differ from your phone,
depending on the software installed or your service provider.
World Wide Web
http://www.samsungmobile.com
English. 02/2005. Rev.1.0
ELECTRONICS
PORTABLE CELLULAR
TELEPHONE
SCH-N380
User’s Manual
Please read this manual before operating your phone, and keep it
for future reference.
Contents
1
Contents
IMPORTANT SAFETY PRECAUTIONS ............. 5
UNPACKING ................................................. 7
YOUR PHONE................................................ 8
Phone Layout ............................................. 8
Display.................................................... 11
Backlight ................................................. 12
GETTING STARTED ..................................... 13
Installing a Battery ................................... 13
Charging the Battery................................. 14
Switching On or Off the Phone.................... 16
Using the Soft Keys................................... 17
Your Phone’s Modes .................................. 18
CALL FUNCTIONS ....................................... 21
Making a Call ........................................... 21
Answering a Call....................................... 27
Silencing the Call Ringer............................ 27
Options During a Call ................................ 28
Using Caller ID ......................................... 29
Viewing Missed Calls ................................. 29
ENTERING TEXT ......................................... 30
Changing the Text Input Mode.................... 31
Using T9(English) Mode ............................. 32
Using Alphabet Mode................................. 33
Using Symbol Mode................................... 35
Using Number Mode.................................. 35
Contents
2
USING THE MENUS..................................... 36
Accessing a Menu Function by Scrolling........ 36
Using Shortcuts........................................ 37
List of Menu Functions............................... 38
PHONE BOOK ............................................. 42
Find
(Menu 1-1)
.......................................... 42
Add Entry
(Menu 1-2)
.................................. 45
Groups
(Menu 1-3)
...................................... 48
Memory Status
(Menu 1-4)
........................... 49
MESSAGES.................................................. 50
Write
(Menu 2-1)
........................................ 50
Inbox
(Menu 2-2)
........................................ 52
Outbox
(Menu 2-3)
...................................... 53
Drafts
(Menu 2-4)
....................................... 53
Templates
(Menu 2-5)
................................. 54
Erase Messages
(Menu 2-6)
.......................... 55
Settings
(Menu 2-7)
.................................... 55
Voice Mail
(Menu 2-8)
.................................. 57
SMS Groups
(Menu 2-9)
.............................. 58
One Touch Paging
(Menu 2-0)
....................... 58
CALL HISTORY ........................................... 60
Missed
(Menu 3-1)
...................................... 60
Received
(Menu 3-2)
................................... 62
Dialled
(Menu 3-3)
...................................... 62
Erase History
(Menu 3-4)
............................. 62
Call Duration
(Menu 3-5)
.............................. 63
SOUND ....................................................... 64
Ring Tones
(Menu 4-1)
................................ 64
Ringer Volume
(Menu 4-2)
............................ 65
Alerts
(Menu 4-3)
........................................ 66
Key Tone
(Menu 4-4)
................................... 66
Power On/Off Melody
(Menu 4-5)
.................. 67
Contents
3
DISPLAY .................................................... 68
Bahasa
(Menu 5-1)
...................................... 68
Wallpaper
(Menu 5-2)
.................................. 68
Banner
(Menu 5-3)
...................................... 69
Backlight
(Menu 5-4)
................................... 69
LCD Contrast
(Menu 5-5)
............................. 70
Shortcut Indicator
(Menu 5-6)
....................... 70
ORGANISER ............................................... 71
Scheduler
(Menu 6-1)
.................................. 71
Task List
(Menu 6-2)
.................................... 75
Memo Pad
(Menu 6-3)
................................. 76
Alarm
(Menu 6-4)
........................................ 77
Calculator
(Menu 6-5)
.................................. 78
World Time
(Menu 6-6)
................................ 79
Count Down
(Menu 6-7)
............................... 79
SETTINGS................................................... 81
Call
(Menu 7-1)
........................................... 81
Phone/System
(Menu 7-2)
............................ 82
Security
(Menu 7-3)
.................................... 84
GAMES ....................................................... 88
Settings
(Menu 8-6)
.................................... 89
HEALTH AND SAFETY INFORMATION ......... 90
Exposure to Radio Frequency (RF) Signals.... 90
For Body Operation................................... 92
Precautions When Using Batteries ............... 92
Road Safety ............................................. 94
Operating Environment.............................. 94
Electronic Devices..................................... 95
Potentially Explosive Atmosphere................ 97
Emergency Calls....................................... 98
Other Important Safety Information ............ 99
Care and Maintenance............................... 99
Contents
4
GLOSSARY................................................ 102
INDEX ...................................................... 106
5
Important Safety
Precautions
Read these guidelines before using your wireless
phone. Failure to comply with them may be
dangerous or illegal.
Road Safety at All Times
Do not use a hand-held phone while driving; park
the vehicle first.
Switching Off When Refuelling
Do not use the phone at a refuelling point (service
station) or near fuels or chemicals.
Switching Off in an Aircraft
Wireless phones can cause interference. Using
them in an aircraft is both illegal and dangerous.
Switching Off near all medical equipment
Switch off your phone near medical equipment.
Hospitals or health care facilities may be using
equipment that could be sensitive to external RF
energy. Follow any regulations or rules in force.
Interference
All wireless phones may be subject to
interference, which could affect their performance.
Special Regulations
Meet any special regulations in force in any area
and always with off your phone whenever it is
Important Safety Precautions
6
forbidden to use it, or when it may cause
interference or danger (in a hospital for example).
Water Resistance
Your phone is not water-resistant. Keep it dry.
Sensible Use
Use only in the normal position (held to the ear).
Avoid unnecessary contact with the antenna when
the phone is switched on.
Emergency Call
Key in the emergency number for your present
location, then press the key. Give all the
necessary information as accurately as possible.
Do not end the call until given permission to do so.
Accessories and Batteries
Use only Samsung-approved accessories and
batteries. Use of any unauthorised accessories
could damage your phone and may be dangerous.
Use only Samsung-approved batteries and
recharge your battery only with Samsung-
approved chargers.
Qualified Service
Only qualified service personnel may repair your
phone.For more detailed safety information, see
“Health and Safety Information” on page 90.
CAUTION
RISK OF EXPLOSION IF A BATTERY IS
REPLACED BY AN INCORRECT TYPE.
DISPOSE USED BATTERIES ACCORDING TO
THE INSTRUCTIONS.
7
Unpacking
Your package contains the following items. The
illustrations below may look different from your
phone and accessories:
In addition, you can obtain the following
accessories for your phone from your local
Samsung dealer:
Standard Battery
•Travel Charger/Adapter
•Car Adapter
Straight Headset
•Hand Strap
Handset Travel Adapter
User’s Manual Battery
8
Your Phone
Phone Layout
The following illustrations shows the main
elements of your phone.
Earpiece
Display
Adapter jack
Headset
jack
Soft key
(left)
Call key
Soft key (right)
Power on/off/
End key
Alphanumeric
keys
Cancel/
Clear key
Navigation
keys
Microphone
Key Guar
d
key Vibrate mode
key
1-Beep mode
key
Your Phone
9
Keys
Key
(s)
Description
(soft keys)
Performs the functions indicated by
the text above them, on the bottom
line of the display.
In Menu mode, scrolls through the
menu options.
In Standby mode, quickly enters the
following menus respectively:
• :
Messages
• :
Games
• :
Scheduler
• :
Sound
Deletes characters from the display.
In Menu mode, returns to the
previous menu level.
Makes or answers a call.
In Standby mode, retrieves the most
recent numbers dialled, received, or
missed. Redials the last outgoing
number when pressed and held.
Ends a call. Also switches on and off
the phone when pressed and held.
In Menu mode, cancels your input
and returns to Standby mode.
Your Phone
10
Enters numbers, letters, and some
special characters.
Enters 1-Beep mode when pressed
and held.
In Standby mode, activates Key
Guard mode when pressed and held.
To unlock the keypad, press and
then .
In the text entry mode, changes the
case of letters.
In Standby mode, quickly enters or
exits Vibrate mode when pressed and
held.
In the text entry mode, inserts a
space.
Key
(s)
Description
(continued)
Your Phone
11
Display
The display has three areas: the top line of icons,
the text and graphic area, and the bottom line of
soft key indicators.
Icons
Icon Description
Signal Strength
: Shows the received
signal strength. The greater the number
of bars, the better the signal.
Service
: Appears when a call is in
progress.
No Service
: Appears when you are
outside a service area. When it displays,
you cannot make or receive calls. Wait a
little while for a better signal or move
into an open area to regain service.
Roaming
: Appears when you are out of
your home area and have logged onto a
different network; for example, when
travelling in other countries.
Icons
Text and graphic
area
Soft key
indicators
Your Phone
12
Backlight
The backlight illuminates the display and keypad.
When you press any key, the backlight illuminates.
It turns off if no key is pressed within a given
period of time, depending on your setting in the
Backlight
menu (
Menu 5-4
).
To specify the length of time the phone waits
before the backlight turns off, set the
Backlight
menu; see page 69 for further details.
New Message
: Indicates that there is a
new message waiting to be checked.
Alarm
: Appears when you set an alarm
to ring at a specified time.
Vibration
: Appears when your phone is
in Vibrate mode or it is set to vibrate
when a call comes in the
Ringer
Volume
menu.
Battery Status
: Shows the level of
your battery. The more bars you see,
the more power you have remaining.
Icon Description
(continued)
13
Getting Started
Installing a Battery
Your phone is powered by a rechargeable Li-ion
battery. Use only approved batteries and
chargers. Ask your local Samsung dealer for
further details.
Note
: You must fully charge the battery before using
your phone for the first time. A discharged
battery is fully recharged in approximately
145 minutes for a standard battery.
Installing the Battery
1. Remove the battery cover by pressing down
the groove and then sliding the cover out.
2. Place the battery into the battery slot, making
sure that the metal contacts is facing down.
Getting Started
14
3. Place the battery cover, as shown, and slide it
toward the top of the phone until it clicks into
place.
Charging the Battery
Your phone is powered by a rechargable Li-ion
battery. A travel adapter comes with your phone.
Use only approved batteries and chargers. Ask
your local Samsung dealer.
You can use the phone while the battery is being
charged, but this will cause the battery to charge
more slowly.
1. With the battery in position on the phone, plug
the connector of the travel adapter into the
adapter jack at the bottom of the phone.
Getting Started
15
2. Plug the adapter into a standard AC wall outlet.
The Battery Strength icon on the display
repeats filling and emptying itself to indicate
that the battery is charging.
3. When charging is finished, unplug the adapter
from both the power outlet and the phone by
pressing the buttons on both sides of the
connector and pulling the connector out.
Note
: Do not remove the battery from the phone
without unplugging the adapter while it is
charging. Otherwise, the phone may be
damaged.
Low Battery Indicator
When the battery is weak and only a few minutes
of talk time remain, the battery sensor will let you
know by blinking the empty Battery Strength icon
( ). You will hear a warning tone and a “LOW
BATTERY WARNING” message will be repeated at
regular intervals on the display.
When the battery becomes too weak for the phone
to operate, it switches off automatically.
Getting Started
16
Switching On or Off the Phone
1. Press and hold for more than one second
to switch on the phone.
The power-on image displays and an alert
sounds. When the your phone locates services,
it displays the current time and date. You can
now place and receive calls.
If the phone is out of the service area, the No
Service icon ( ) appears on the display. In
this case, you cannot place and receive calls.
You can try again later when service is
available.
Note
: You can change the display language in
the
Bahasa
menu (
Menu 5-1
). See
page 68.
2. When you wish to switch off the phone, press
and hold for more than two seconds.
WARNING!
Do not switch on the phone when mobile phone
use is prohibited or when it may cause
interference or danger.
Note
: If your phone is in Key Guard mode, you first
need to unlock the keys by pressing and
.
Getting Started
17
Using the Soft Keys
Your phone offers a set of functions that allows
you to customise it. These functions are arranged
in menus and submenus, accessed using the two
soft keys marked and . Each menu and
submenu allows you to view and alter the settings
of a particular function.
The roles of the soft keys vary according to the
current function you are using; the labels on the
bottom line of the display just above each key
indicates its current role.
Example:
:
MON
Press the left soft
key to access the
Menu mode.
Press the right soft
key to find a name
or number from
Phone Book.
Getting Started
18
Your Phone’s Modes
Standby Mode
Standby is the most basic state of your phone.
The phone goes into Standby mode soon after you
turn it on, or whenever you briefly press .
When your phone is in Standby mode, you will
typically see a wallpaper or banner message and
the current date and time. If you enter a phone
number, you can press to dial it, or press the
Save
soft key to save it in the internal Phone
Book.
Press at any time to return to Standby mode.
Be careful; if you are on a call when you press the
key, your phone disconnects the call and returns
to Standby mode.
Menu mode can be accessed when you are in
Standby mode.
Talk Mode
You can place and answer calls only when your
phone is turned on. During a call, the phone is in
the Talk mode. While you are in Talk mode,
pressing the
Menu
soft key gives you a list of
options. See page 28 for details on the options.
Getting Started
19
Key Guard Mode
You can lock the keypad by pressing and holding
in Standby mode. By doing this, you can
prevent accidental key pressing.
To unlock the keypad, press and then . The
Lock icon ( ) displays in the soft key indicator
field.
When you have an incoming call or an alarm
occurs in Key Guard mode, the mode is
automatically deactivated and the phone goes to
Standby mode.
Note
:
• You can set the phone to automatically lock the
keypad after a specified period of time, in the
Key
Guard
menu (
Menu 7-2-2
). See page 82.
• In Key Guard mode, you cannot make an
emergency call. You should unlock the keypad
before making a call.
Lock Mode
When you lock your phone using the
Lock
Mode
menu (
Menu 7-3-1
), you can receive messages
and calls, but you cannot place a call until you
unlock the phone.
Once the phone is locked, it is in restricted mode
until the lock code is entered. Press soft key,
Unlock then enter 4 digit password. The lock code
password by default is 0000.
In case you have changed the password and are
unable to remember the new password. Please
contact Samsung authorised service center.
For further details about locking and unlocking the
phone, see page 84.
Getting Started
20
Vibrate Mode
Vibrate Mode disables all sounds on the phone.
This feature is best used in situations where the
phone might disturb others, such as in a meeting,
a library, or a theatre. You can switch your phone
to Vibrate Mode with one touch of a key.
In Standby mode, press and hold down until
“Enter! Vibrate Mode” and the Vibrator icon ( )
display.
To exit and reactivate the previous sound settings,
press and hold again until “Exit! Vibrate
Mode” appears. The Vibrator icon no longer
displays.
1-Beep Mode
In 1-Beep mode, your phone beeps only once
when a call or SMS is incoming. You can switch
your phone to the 1-Beep mode with one touch of
a key.
In Standby mode, press and hold until
“Entering 1-Beep Mode” displays.
To exit and reactivate the previous sound settings,
press and hold again until “Exit 1-Beep Mode”
displays.
21
Call Functions
Making a Call
To make a call:
1. In Standby mode, enter the area code and
phone number.
2. Press . The phone places the call to the
entered phone number.
Note
: If you have activated the
Auto Redial
menu
(
Menu 7-1-2
), the phone automatically
retries to make the call up to 10 times when a
connection fails. See page 81 for more
information.
Using the Dialling Options
While entering a phone number, you can use the
following options by pressing the
Options
soft
key.
Speed Dial
: allows you to use the Speed Dialling
feature. For details, see page 24. This option
displays only when you enter a number which can
be a Phone Book memory location.
Call
: places a call to the number you entered.
Save
: allows you to save the number you entered
in Phone Book. For details, see page 45.
Find
: allows you to find a number from Phone
Book. For details, see page 42.
Call Functions
22
Hard Pause
: enters a hard pause. For details
about pause-dialling, see page 25.
Correcting the Number
Ending a Call
When you want to finish your call, briefly press
.
The call time, or the length of the call, displays
briefly and the phone returns to Standby mode.
Making a Call from Phone Book
You can store the phone numbers that you use
regularly in the phone’s memory, which are
collectively called Phone Book. Simply select the
required name to recall the associated number to
dial.
For more information about the Phone Book
feature, see page 42.
To clear Press
the last digit
displayed .
the whole display for more than one
second.
Call Functions
23
Redialling the Last Number
To redial the last call you made, press twice or
press and hold it down.
Your phone stores the most recent 10 numbers
each you dialled received or missed. To redial any
of these numbers:
1. If you have typed any characters on the
display, press to return to Standby mode.
2. Press to display the list of the dialled
numbers.
You can scroll to the other types of calls,
missed and received calls, if any, by pressing
or .
3. Use and to scroll through the list until
the required number highlights.
4. To dial the number, press .
Emergency Dialling
You can place emergency call from your
emergency number list even if your phone is
locked. For more information on emergency
numbers, see page 85.
Call Functions
24
Speed Dialling
Once you have stored phone numbers in Phone
Book, you can dial them easily whenever you
want. You can assign up to 1000 numbers for
Speed Dialling.
For the Memory Locations of One Digit
Press and hold the digit of the memory location
containing the number to be dialled.
For example: Location no. 0009
press and hold .
The stored number and name display and then the
phone dials the number.
For the Other Memory Locations
Press the first digit(s) briefly, then hold down the
last digit of the memory location.
For example: Location no. 0023
Press briefly and hold down
.
The stored number and name display and then the
phone dials the number.
Note
: When several numbers are saved in one
location, only the phone number which is
specified with the Speed Dial label will be
automatically dialled. For details, refer to
page 46.
Call Functions
25
Pause Dialling
When you call automated systems, like banking
services, you are often required to enter a
password or an account number. Instead of
manually entering the numbers each time, you
can store them in your Phone Book or enter all of
them before dialling, separated by pauses.
Storing a number in your Phone Book that
contains pauses
1. Enter the phone number you want to store,
such as a bank’s teleservice phone number.
2. Press the
Options
soft key and then select
Hard Pause
.
The letter “P” displays within the number,
meaning that a hard pause will occur at that
point in the calling sequence.
3. Enter a number to follow the pause, such as
you account number or password.
4. Continue entering numbers by repeating steps
2 and 3.
5. Store the number in your Phone Book as you
normally would by pressing the
Save
soft key
and following the screen prompts.
Pause Dialling from a Stored Phone Book
Entry
1. Dial the number from the Phone Book.
2. Wait for the appropriate prompt for the
number, such as a credit card number or a
bank account number.
Call Functions
26
3. When prompted, press to send the DTMF
(Dual-tone Multi-frequency) number that
follows your pause.
Manual Pause Dialling
You can enter pauses manually during the dialling
process.
1. Enter the phone number of the service you
want to connect to, such as a bank’s
teleservice phone number.
2. Press the
Options
soft key and then select
Hard Pause
.
The letter “P” displays within the number,
meaning that a hard pause will occur at that
point in the calling sequence.
3. Enter a number to follow the pause, such as
you account number or password.
4. Continue entering numbers by repeating steps
2 and 3.
5. When the number is completed, press to
make a call to the number.
6. Each time you are prompted, press to send
the DTMF number that follows your pause.
Call Functions
27
Answering a Call
When someone calls you, the phone rings and
displays the incoming call image.
When the caller can be identified, the caller’s
phone number or name, if it is stored in your
Phone Book, displays. If the caller cannot be
identified, “Blocked ID.” displays.
1. To answer a call, press .
If the
Answer Mode
menu (
Menu 7-1-1
) is
set to
Any Key
, you can answer the call by
pressing any key, except for and the
Silence
soft key.
If the menu is set to
Call Key
, you must press
to answer the call. For further details on
the
Answer Mode
menu, see page 81.
2. To end an answered call press .
Note
: You can answer a call while using the Phone
Book or Menu features. The current operation
will be interrupted.
Silencing the Call Ringer
If you press or the
Silence
soft key once,
when a call is received, the phone stops ringing or
vibrating depending on the mode it is in.
You can still answer the call by pressing , or by
pressing twice to disconnect without
answering the call.
Call Functions
28
Options During a Call
Your phone provides a number of control functions
that you can use during a call.
Press the
Menu
soft key during a call to access
the following options:
Phone Book
: allows you to access the
Phone
Book
menu. See page 42 for details.
Mute/Quit
: allows you to switch your phone’s
microphone off or on. When you mute the
microphone, the person with whom you are
talking cannot hear you.
For example: You wish to say something to
another person in the room but do not want the
the person with whom you are talking to hear you.
Silent/Quit
: allows you to switch the key tones
off or on. By switching the tones off, you can press
the keys without hearing annoying key tones
during a call.
Call History
: allows you to access the
Call
History
menu. See page 60 for details.
Messages
: allows you to use the
Messages
menu. See page 50 for details.
Organiser
: allows you to access the
Organiser
menu. See page 71 for details.
Voice Privacy
: encrypts the voice channel so that
people cannot eavesdrop on your conversation.
For further details, see page 86.
Call Functions
29
Using Caller ID
This feature tells you who is calling you by
displaying the caller’s number when the phone
rings. If a caller’s name and number are stored in
your Phone Book, the corresponding name
displays along with the number. If you call
someone whose phone is available with this
feature, your phone number displays on her or his
phone.
Note
: For further details about the Caller ID service,
contact your service provider.
Viewing Missed Calls
Your phone keeps a list of calls that you do not
answer when the phone is on and service is
available. The phone indicates a Missed Call by
displaying a text notification on the screen.
Additionally, if caller information is available, the
screen displays the phone number of the most
recent Missed Call.
Press to call the displayed number.
Press the
Save
soft key to save the displayed
number
To view Missed Calls, access the
Missed
menu
(
Menu 3-1
). For further details, see page 60.
30
Entering Text
When using your phone, you will need to enter
text at many times; for example, when storing a
name in Phone Book, creating a text message, or
scheduling events in your calendar. You can enter
alphanumeric characters into your phone by using
your phone’s keypad.
Your phone has the following text input modes:
T9(English)
: This mode allows you to enter
words with only one keypress per letter. Each
key on a keypad has more than one letter; for
example, when you press once, J,K or L
displays. The T9(English) mode automatically
compares your key presses to an internal
linguistic database to determine the correct
word thus requiring far fewer keystrokes than
the traditional multi-tap method, Alphabet
mode.
Alphabet
: This mode allows you to enter
letters by pressing the key labelled with the
letter you want once, twice, or three times until
the letter displays.
Symbol
: This mode allows you to enter various
symbols, punctuation marks, and special
characters.
Number
: This mode allows you to enter
numbers.
Entering Text
31
Changing the Text Input Mode
When you are in a field that allows characters to
be entered, you will notice the text input mode
indicator on the display.
Example: When you are entering a name
To change the text input mode:
1. Press the
Options
soft key.
2. Scroll to the mode you want by pressing or
.
Note
: If you want to exit the menu without
changing to a new mode, press .
3. Press the
Select
soft key.
You will find the indicator of the selected text
input mode on the display.
Text input
mode indicator
Entering Text
32
Using T9(English) Mode
T9 is a predictive text input mode which allows
you to enter any character using single
keystrokes. This text input mode is based on a
built-in dictionary.
1. When you are in T9(English) mode, start
entering a word by pressing keys to .
Press each key only once for one letter.
Example: To enter “Hello” in T9 mode, press
, , , , and .
The word you are typing appears on the
display. It may change with each key press.
2. Type to the end of the word before editing or
deleting any keystrokes.
3. When the word displays correctly, skip to step
4.
If the word is not correct, press to display
alternative word choices for the keys that you
have pressed.
Example: both “Of” and “Me” have the
sequence of and . The phone
displays the most commonly used
choice first.
4. Put a space between words by pressing .
To type words not found in T9(English) mode,
change the text input mode to Alphabet mode.
To enter full stops, hyphens or apostrophes,
press . T9(English) mode applies grammar
rules to ensure that the correct punctuation is
used.
Entering Text
33
To change the case in T9(English) mode, use
. There are three cases:
Word
: initial letter is capitalised.
WORD
: all letters are capitalised.
word
: all letters are lower-cased.
You can enter a space by pressing .
You can move the cursor through your text by
pressing the Navigation keys.
To delete letters, press . Press and hold down
to clear the display.
To enter a number between letters without
exiting T9 input mode, press and hold the
number key.
Using Alphabet Mode
When typing in Alphabet mode, you should press
the keys labelled with the letter you want:
- once for the first letter
- twice for the second letter
- and so on.
This method is called Multi-tap typing.
For example, you press three times to display
the letter “C” and two times to display the
“K.
Note
: The cursor moves to the right when you press
a different key. When entering the same letter
twice or a different letter on the same key,
just wait for a few seconds for the cursor to
move to the right automatically, and then
select the next letter.
Entering Text
34
Refer to the table below for the list of characters
assigned to each key.
(Caps Lock mode)
To change the case of the next letters that you
type, press . There are three cases:
: initial letter is capitalised.
: all letters are capitalised.
: all letters are lower-cased.
You can enter a space between words by
pressing .
You can move the cursor through your text by
pressing the Navigation keys.
Key Characters in the Order Displayed
. @ ? ! - , & : ‘ 1
AB C 2
DE F 3
GH I 4
JKL 5
MN O 6
PQR S 7
TU V 8
WX Y Z 9
0
Entering Text
35
To delete letters, press . Press and hold to
clear the display.
To quickly enter a number between letters,
press and hold the number key.
Using Symbol Mode
Symbol mode allows you to enter symbols.
Press or to display more symbols.
Press the number keys corresponding to the
symbol you want. The phone automatically
switches back to the text entry mode used just
prior to selecting Symbol mode.
Using Number Mode
Number mode enables you enter numbers. Press
the keys corresponding to the digits you want, and
manually switch back to text input mode of
choice; see page 31 for changing the text input
mode.
36
Using the Menus
The phone offers a range of functions that allows
you to tailor it to your needs. These functions are
arranged in menus and submenus.
The menus and submenus can be accessed by
scrolling or by using the shortcuts.
Accessing a Menu Function by
Scrolling
1. In Standby mode, press the
Menu
soft key to
access Menu mode.
2. Press the Navigation keys to reach a main
menu; for example,
Display
. Press the
Select
soft key to enter the
Display
menu.
3. If the menu contains any submenus; for
example,
Bahasa
, find the one you want by
pressing or . Press the
Select
soft key to
enter the submenu. If the selected menu
contains submenus, repeat this step.
4. Press the Navigation keys to find the setting of
your choice.
5. Press the
OK
soft key to confirm the chosen
setting.
Notes
:
• You can return to the previous menu level by
pressing the Back soft key or .
• You can exit the menu without changing the menu
settings by pressing .
Using the Menus
37
Using Shortcuts
The menu items, such as menus, submenus and
setting options, are numbered and can be
accessed quickly by using their shortcut numbers.
Note
: The numbers assigned to each menu function
are indicated on the list on page 38.
In Standby mode, press the
Menu
soft key to
access Menu mode.
1. Enter the first digit of the shortcut number.
Repeat this for each digit of the shortcut
number.
Example: Changing the display language
Press and .
5
selects
Display
and
1
selects the
Bahasa
menu function.
2. Press the Navigation keys to find the setting of
your choice.
3. Press the
OK
or
Select
soft key to confirm the
chosen setting.
Using the Menus
38
List of Menu Functions
The following list shows the menu structure
available and indicates the number assigned to
each option.
1. Phone Book
(see page 42)
1.1 Find
1.2 Add Entry
1.2.1 Add Number
1.2.2 Add Email
1.2.3 Add URL
1.3 Groups
1.4 Memory Status
2. Messages
(see page 50)
2.1 Write
2.2 Inbox
2.3 Outbox
2.3.1 Sent
2.3.2 Unsent
2.4 Drafts
2.5 Templates
2.6 Erase Messages
2.6.1 Inbox
2.6.2 Outbox
2.6.3 Drafts
2.6.4 All Messages
2.6.5 Voice Mail
2.7 Settings
2.7.1 Auto Scroll
2.7.2 Msg Reminder
2.7.3 New Messages
2.7.3.1 Save Message
2.7.3.2 Entry Method
2.7.4 Alert On Call
2.8 Voice Mail
2.9 SMS Groups
2.0 One Touch Paging
2.0.1 View Members
2.0.2 Edit MSG
2.0.3 Setting
Using the Menus
39
3. Call History
(see page 60)
3.1 Missed
3.2 Received
3.3 Dialled
3.4 Erase History
3.4.1 Missed
3.4.2 Received
3.4.3 Dialled
3.4.4 All
3.5 Call Duration
3.5.1 Last Call
3.5.2 Total Dialled Calls
3.5.3 Total Received Calls
3.5.4 Reset All
3.5.5 Life Time
4. Sound
(see page 64)
4.1 Ring Tones
4.1.1 Calls
4.1.2 Messages
4.1.3 Schedules
4.2 Ringer Volume
4.2.1 Calls
4.2.2 Messages
4.2.3 Alarm/Schedules
4.3 Alerts
4.3.1 Call Connect
4.3.2 Call Disconnect
4.4 Key Tone
4.4.1 Tone Volume
4.4.2 Tone Length
4.5 Power On/Off Melody
Using the Menus
40
5. Display
(see page 68)
5.1 Bahasa
5.2 Wallpaper
5.3 Banner
5.4 Backlight
5.5 LCD Contrast
5.6 Shortcut Indicator
6. Organiser
(see page 71)
6.1 Scheduler
6.1.1 Today
6.1.2 All
6.2 Task List
6.3 Memo Pad
6.4 Alarm
6.4.1 Daily Alarm
6.4.2 Weekly Alarm
6.5 Calculator
6.6 World Time
6.7 Count Down
7. Settings
(see page 81)
7.1 Call
7.1.1 Answer Mode
7.1.2 Auto Redial
7.2 Phone/System
7.2.1 Dial Short Cut
7.2.2 Key Guard
7.2.3 Set Time
7.2.4 Version
7.3 Security
7.3.1 Lock Mode
7.3.2 Change Code
7.3.3 Emergency Numbers
7.3.4 Voice Privacy
7.3.5 Clear Phone Book
7.3.6 Reset Phone
7.3.7 Clear SMS Groups
Using the Menus
41
8. Games
(see page 88)
8.1 Child Monk Adventure
8.2 Black Planet
8.3 Hello Monkey
8.4 Bowling
8.5 Othello
8.6 Settings
8.6.1 Volume
8.6.2 Backlight
During a Call + Menu
1: Phone Book
2: Mute/Quit
3: Silent/Quit
4: Call History
5: Messages
6: Organiser
7: Voice Privacy
42
Phone Book
The Phone Book allows you to store frequently-
used phone numbers and the associated names in
your personal directory to make it easy for you to
make a call without remembering or entering the
phone number. You can store up to 2000 entries.
Each entry can contain up to 32 digits including
hard pauses, with an associated name of up to 20
characters.
Find
(Menu 1-1)
In this menu, you can search Phone Book for an
entry using a name, entry number, and group
name.
Note
: You can quickly access this menu by pressing
the
Find
soft key in Standby mode.
Press a search method by pressing or .
By Name
This option allows you to find an entry by entering
a person’s name.
1. Press or to scroll to the name you want.
To find an entry with a name, enter the first
letters of the name you want to find. The
phone searches for the first entry starting with
that character.
2. When the entry highlights, press the
Select
soft key to access the entry.
Phone Book
43
Note
: All of the numbers stored for the entry
display, including numbers stored into
different categories. Press
or
to
find the number you want.
When you press the
Options
soft key, the
following options are available:
Edit
: allows you to edit the phone number, name,
location number, label category and so on.
Prepend
: allows you to add digits such as area
codes and network feature activation codes to the
phone number before dialling it.
Erase
: erases the number.
Send Msg
: allows you to write and send a
message to the number. For details, see page 50.
By Entry
This option allows you to find an entry by entering
its entry number.
1. Enter the location by pressing the numeric
keys.
3.
To Press
place a call to the
number or the
Call
soft key.
use the menu
options the
Options
soft key.
For details, see below.
Phone Book
44
By Group
This option allows you to find an entry by selecting
its caller group.
1. Press to highlight the group selection field.
2. Select the group containing the entry you want
to find by pressing or .
The phone displays the list of all entries in the
selected group.
3. Scan through the list using or to find the
entry you want and press the
Select
soft key.
2.
To Press
place a call to the
number or the
Call
soft key.
use the menu
options the
Options
soft key.
For details, see
page 43.
4.
To Press
place a call to the
number or the
Call
soft key.
use the menu
options the
Options
soft key. For
details, see page 43.
Phone Book
45
Add Entry
(Menu 1-2)
This menu allows you to store a number with a
name in your Phone Book. You can save a person’s
numbers, such as workplace number, mobile
phone number and fax number, into one entry. A
Phone Book entry can contain up to six numbers,
one in each category.
Add Number
(Menu 1-2-1)
1. Enter a phone number and press the
Save
soft
key.
2. Press the
Select
soft key to confirm adding a
new entry.
When you are storing a number for the first
time, skip to step 3.
Note
: If you want to add the number to an
existing entry, select it from the list.
3. Enter a name and press the
Next
soft key.
For further details about entering characters,
see page 30.
4. Select an icon to label the category of the
number to be stored using the Navigation keys
and press the
Select
soft key.
5. To select an option, scroll to it by pressing
or . Press the
Edit
soft key to enter
Phone Book
46
information or use or to change the
setting.
The following options are available for the
entry:
Enter Name
: allows you to edit a name of
up to 20 characters.
Entry
: The first available location displays. If
necessary, enter the entry number using the
number keys.
Home
/
Office
/
Mobile
/
Pager
/
Fax
/
No
Label
: allows you to store more numbers for
each category.
Speed Dial
: allows you to select one of the
stored numbers to be dialled when you press
or the
Call
soft key after selecting the
entry or when you use the Speed Dialling
feature.
Email
: allows you to store an e-mail
address.
URL
: allows you to store a URL address.
Group
: allows you to assign an entry to a
caller group. To remove the entry from a
group, select
No Group
.
Name Ringer
: allows you to select the
unique ringer to be used for alerting you to
an incoming call from the person.
Secret
: allows you to prevent a number from
being displayed when it is accessed or dialled
by unauthorised users. When this option is
set to
On
, only people with your phone’s lock
code can view the secret number.
Phone Book
47
6. When you finish setting the options, press the
Save
soft key to store the entry.
After storing, the phone displays the name that
you just saved and then the total number of
the Phone Book entries you have stored.
Add Email
(Menu 1-2-2)
This menu allows you to add a new entry by
entering an e-mail address.
1. Enter an e-mail address and press the
Next
soft key.
For further details about entering characters,
see page 30.
2. Enter a name and press the
Next
soft key.
3. To complete storing the e-mail address, follow
the procedure from step 5 in “Add Number” on
page 45.
Add URL
(Menu 1-2-3)
This menu allows you to add a new entry by
entering a URL address of a web page.
1. Enter an URL address and press the
Next
soft
key.
2. Enter a name. For further details about
entering characters, see page 30.
3. Press the
Next
soft key.
4. To complete storing an URL address, follow
from step 5 in “Add Number” on page 45.
Phone Book
48
Groups
(Menu 1-3)
This menu allows you to change the ringers and
the names for the caller groups.
To change the ringer for a caller group:
1. Scroll to the group you want to edit using
or
.
2. Press the
Ringer
soft key to select a ringer
melody to indicate when a call comes in from
any members of the group.
3. Select the ringer category you want by
pressing or and press .
4. Select the ringer melody you want by pressing
or .
5. Press the
Select
soft key.
To change the name of a caller group:
1. Press or to scroll to the group you want
to edit.
2. Press the
Rename
soft key.
3. Press to clear the current group name.
4. Enter a new name and press the
Save
soft
key.
Note
: The ringer and the name of
No Group
cannot
be editted.
Phone Book
49
Memory Status
(Menu 1-4)
This menu shows the total number of entries that
currently stored in your Phone Book.
50
Messages
Your phone can send and receive text messages.
It can also receive voice mail notifications.
When the phone receives a message, an alert
sounds and a text notification displays along with
the name and phone number of the sender, if
available. The New Message icon ( ) remains on
the screen until you read the new text messages
or you listen to the new voice mail messages.
Messages are received even when your phone is in
Lock mode. To access a message, you must unlock
the phone.
Note
: You can quickly access the
Message
menu
by pressing in Standby mode.
Write
(Menu 2-1)
You can create a text message of up to 160
characters and send it to other mobile phones.
To write a new message:
1. Enter the message text.
Press the
Options
soft key and select
Templates
to add a message template. For
further details about templates, see page 54.
2. When you finish entering text, press the
Next
soft key.
3. Enter a destination number using the numeric
keys.
Pressing the
Options
soft key allows you to
search your Phone Book or SMS Groups for a
number.
Messages
51
Note
: You can enter more numbers by entering a
space between them using . You can
send to 15 destinations at the same time.
4. When you finish entering, press the
Next
soft
key.
5. To select an option, press or and press
the
Edit
soft key and enter information or
change the setting. The following options are
available:
Msg
: allows you to change the message
contents you’ve already entered.
Send To
: allows you to change the
destination phone number.
Settings
: allows you to change the message
options in order.
After changing the first option, press the
Next
soft key. You can then set the next
options. When you set the last option and
press the
Save
soft key, the settings are
saved and the display returns to the New
Message screen.
Priority: you can select a message priority.
Save Message: you can set whether or not
the phone saves the message in the Outbox.
When you select
Prompt Save
, the phone
asks if you want to save the message when
you attempt to send it.
Note
: The
Save Message
option can be preset
in the
New Messages
menu (
Menu 2-
7-3
); for details, see page 56.
Save Msg
: to store the message in the
Drafts
menu (
Menu 2-4
) for future use,
press the
Save
soft key.
6. After changing the setting options, press or
the
Send
soft key to send the message.
Messages
52
Inbox
(Menu 2-2)
Your phone can store up to 50 messages total in
Inbox, Outbox and the Drafts box. When the
memory is full, a warning message displays and
the phone rejects additional messages until you
erase the obsolete ones.
When you access the
Inbox
menu option, the
message list appears.
: indicates that a message has been received.
: displays when you have read a message.
To view details, press or to scroll to one of
the messages on the list and press the
Select
soft
key. You can scan through the message contents
by pressing or .
While viewing a message, press the
Reply
soft
key to send a reply message to the sender.
Press the
Options
soft key to use the following
options:
Erase
: erases the message from the Inbox.
Forward
: allows you to forward the message to
another person.
Call
: places a call to the callback number of the
message.
Save
: allows you to save the callback number of
the message.
Messages
53
Outbox
(Menu 2-3)
Your phone can store up to 50 messages total in
Inbox, Outbox and the Drafts box.
In the
Outbox
menu option, you can review
outgoing messages separately depending on their
message type,
Sent
or
Unsent
.
Sent
: the message was successfully delivered.
Unsent
: the message was not sent.
When you select a message type, the message list
appears.
To review a message, press or to scroll to it
and press the
Select
soft key. You can scan
through the message contents by pressing or
.
While reviewing a message, press the
Resend
soft key to resent the message. Press the
Erase
soft key to erases it from Outbox.
Drafts
(Menu 2-4)
Your phone can store draft messages that are yet
to be sent in the Drafts box. If you save the
message content using the
Save Msg
menu
option before sending it (see page 51), you can
access them using this menu.
To review a stored message. press or to
scroll to it and press the
Select
soft key. You can
scan through the message contents by pressing
or .
While reviewing a message, press the
Send
soft
key to send the message. Press the
Erase
soft
key to erases it.
Messages
54
Templates
(Menu 2-5)
Using this menu, you can preset up to
eleven(including Empty message that you can
make) messages that you use most frequently
and send a new message using one of them.
When you access this menu, the preset message
list displays.
To preset a message:
1. Scroll to a message or an empty entry by
pressing or .
2. Press the
Edit
soft key.
3. If necessary, clear the text by pressing and
enter your message.
For further details about how to enter
characters, see page 30.
4. When you are finished, press the
Save
soft
key.
To send a new message using a message
template:
1. Scroll to the message you want by pressing
or .
2. Press the
Select
soft key to send the message.
3. Follow step 3 on page 50.
Messages
55
Erase Messages
(Menu 2-6)
Using this menu, you can erase the messages in
each message box; Voice Mail box, Inbox, Outbox,
and Drafts box. For the Inbox, you can erase only
the messages you have read or all of the
messages. For the Outbox, you can erase only the
message the phone sent or couldn’t send, or all
misusages.
You can also erase all of the messages at one time
by selecting
All Messages
.
When a confirmation message appears, press the
Yes
soft key.
Settings
(Menu 2-7)
In this menu, you can preset several options for
using the messaging features.
Auto Scroll
(Menu 2-7-1)
If an incoming message is too long for the display,
the phone displays it by scrolling the screen
automatically. You can set how often the phone
scrolls the message to the next screen.
If you select
Off
, you need to scroll to the next
screen manually by pressing or .
Messages
56
Msg Reminder
(Menu 2-7-2)
When a message is received, the phone alerts you
by sounding the selected ringer. You can set how
often you want to be alerted.
Off
: the message alert sounds once when the
message is received.
Once
: the message alert sounds once when the
message is received and sounds again after 2
minutes.
Every 2 min
: the message alert sounds every 2
minutes until you check the message.
New Messages
(Menu 2-7-3)
You can set up the default settings of the options
for creating a new message. The following options
are available:
Save Message
: allows you to set whether or not
you want the transmitted message to be saved in
the Outbox.
Do Not Save: the phone does not save the
message.
Prompt Save: the phone asks you if you want to
save the message or not.
Auto Save: the phone automatically saves the
message.
Entry Method
: allows you to select the text input
mode, either T9 Word mode or Alphabet mode.
Messages
57
Alert On Call
(Menu 2-7-4)
This menu allows you to choose whether or not
the phone informs you when you receive a new
message during a call.
On
: the phone alerts you with a beep and displays
the corresponding notification.
Off
: the phone doesn’t actively alert you to
incoming messages. It only displays the
corresponding notification.
Voice Mail
(Menu 2-8)
When multiple new voice messages are received
but you haven’t checked them, information of the
last one displays. The information display includes
the time/date stamp, the number of new voice
messages and the callback number.
While reviewing the message, press the soft key
to access the following options:
Listen
: allows you to listen to the voice message.
The phone automatically dials the number of your
Voice Mail centre.
Reset
: clears the New Message icon and resets
the counter for a new voice message, if
necessary. The phone resets the counter
automatically after you listen to all of the new
messages.
Note
: You can quickly access the voice mail centre
by pressing in Standby mode.
Messages
58
SMS Groups
(Menu 2-9)
Using this menu, you can preset up to 5 SMS
groups that you send a message most frequently.
Scroll to the group you want by pressing the or
key.
Press the
Options
soft key to view members,
clear or rename the group. You can add
members to the group at View Members option.
However, the information of the member that is
supposed to be added should be saved in the
Phone Book.
Press the
Send
soft key to send the message to
the group.
One Touch Paging
(Menu 2-0)
In an emergency, you can send a preset message
to party(ies) that you specify by presssing the
C
key four times from any screen. In this menu, you
can prepare the one-touch paging feature.
View Members
(Menu 2-0-1)
This menu allows you to set up the group of
contacts to whom you want to send an emergency
message.
Adding a contact
When you access this menu for the first time, the
Phonebook list automatically displays.
1. Scroll to a Phonebook entry by using the
Navigation keys and press the
Select
soft key.
Messages
59
2. Scroll to the number you want and press the
Select
soft key.
The number is added to the list.
3. To add more contacts, press the
Add New
soft
key and repeat from step 1.
Erasing a contact
1. From the contact list, select the contact you
want to remove.
2. Press the
Options
soft key.
3. Select
Remove
.
To clear all contacts, select
Clear All
.
Edit MSG
(Menu 2-0-2)
Using this menu, you can edit the pre-written
message, possibly requesting a callback.
Setting
(Menu 2-0-3)
This menu allows you to activate or deactivate the
one-touch paging feature.
60
Call History
You can use the
Call History
menu to:
view and dial the most recent calls you dialled,
received, or missed.
erase the numbers in the call log memory.
view the length of calls.
Note
: You can quickly access the history of all the
three call types by pressing in Standby
mode.
Missed
(Menu 3-1)
If Caller Line Identification service is available,
your phone keeps a list of the most recent 10
incoming calls that you failed to answer. Contact
your service provider for more information about
the service.
When you access this menu, a list of the missed
calls displays.
1. Press or to find a number or name, if it
is saved in Phone Book.
2. Press the
Select
soft key to confirm the
highlighted number.
The missed number or name, if it is saved in
Phone Book, displays along with the time and
date when the call was received.
Call History
61
When you press the
Options
soft key on the call
log list, the following options are available:
Save
: (shows when the number is not stored in
your Phone Book) allows you to save the number
in Phone Book.
Show Entry:
(shows when the number is stored
in your Phone Book) displays the detailed
information stored in the Phone Book entry, such
as a name, entry number, phone numbers, speed
dial number, and other settings.
Edit
: allows you to change the phone number and
then dial it or save it in Phone Book.
Erase
: erases the selected number.
Send Msg
: allows you to send a message. See
page 50 for more information.
3.
To Press
place a call to the
selected number or the
Call
soft key.
use the options the
Options
soft key.
For details, see below.
exit the call log .
Call History
62
Received
(Menu 3-2)
This option lets you view up to 10 of the most
recent calls you received, if you are subscribed to
the Caller Line Identification service. Contact
service provider for more information about this
service.
When you access this menu, a list of the incoming
calls displays.
For more information about scrolling through the
list and accessing the call log, see “Missed” on
page 60.
Dialled
(Menu 3-3)
The phone stores up to 10 of the most recent calls
you dialled. When you access this menu, a list of
the outgoing calls displays.
For more information about scrolling through the
list and accessing the call log, see “Missed” on
page 60.
Erase History
(Menu 3-4)
You can erase the entries stored in each of the
three call histories or all three histories at once.
When a confirmation message displays, press the
Yes
soft key.
Call History
63
Call Duration
(Menu 3-5)
Your phone records the amount of air time, or talk
time, used. Using this option, you can view the
number of the calls to or from your phone, and the
air time for all of the calls. You can easily erase
the air time records at any time. This option is
convenient for estimating your usage.
Note
: This feature is not intended to be used for
billing purposes.
The following options are available:
Last Call
: shows information about the last call,
such as the duration of the call, the other person’s
phone number and the date and time when the
call was made.
Total Dialled Calls
: shows the number of all calls
you have made and the total duration of the calls
since the time counter was last set to zero by
using the
Reset All
option.
Total Received Calls
: shows the number of all
calls you have received and the total duration of
the calls since the time counter was last set to
zero by using the
Reset All
option.
Reset All
: erases the last call, the “Total
received/dialled calls” time measurements, and
resets the air time counters.
Life Time
: shows the number and total duration
of all calls made to or from your phone since the
phone was shipped from the factory.
64
Sound
You can use the
Sound
menu to customise
various sound settings, such as the:
ringer volume, type, and tone.
key tone and alert sounds.
sound which plays when the phone is switched
on or off.
Note
: You can quickly enter this menu by pressing
in the standby mode.
Ring Tones
(Menu 4-1)
This menu allows you to set the unique ringer
melodies for the following items:
Calls
: allows you to set a unique ring for incoming
calls.
Messages
: allows you to have a distinctive ring
for incoming text and voice mail messages
independently.
Schedules
: allows you to have a distinctive ringer
for schedule alarms.
1. Select a ringer category for
Calls
, or select a
message type for
Messages
by pressing or
. For
Schedules
, skip to step 2.
2. Select a ringer by using the Navigation keys.
Each time you select a ringer, the phone plays
the ringer.
3. Press the
Select
soft key.
Sound
65
Ringer Volume
(Menu 4-2)
This menu allows you to adjust the ringer volume.
Calls
: allows you to adjust the ringer volume for
incoming calls.
Messages
: allows you to adjust the ringer volume
for incoming messages.
Alarm/Schedules
: allows you to adjust the
ringer volume for alarm settings and schedule
alarms.
To adjust the volume level for each item, the
following options are available:
Silent: the phone does not sound a ring and does
not flash the backlight.
Light: the phone does not sound a ring and only
flashes the backlight.
Vibrate: an incoming call vibrates the phone.
1-Beep: the phone sounds a beep.
Level 1 ~ 5: adjust the volume level. The more
bars, the louder.
Ascending: the phone sounds from level 1, louder
and louder, to level 5.
Sound
66
Alerts
(Menu 4-3)
Your phone gives audible alerts (beeps) at a
specified time to inform you that certain things
have happened. The alerts only occur in your
earpiece so that the person with whom you are
talking does not hear them.
The following alerts are available:
Call Connect
: when this option is set to
On
, the
phone sounds the connect tone when your call is
connected to the system.
Call Disconnect
: when this option is set to
On
,
the phone sounds the disconnect tone when a call
is disconnected.
Key Tone
(Menu 4-4)
In this menu, you can set up the sound your
phone generates when you press a key.
The following options are available:
Tone Volume
: you can adjust the key tone
volume using the Navigation keys.
Tone Length
: you can select
Long
or
Short
DTMF (Dual-tone Multi-frequency) tones. DTMF
tones are sent by your phone to access
teleservices, such as a bank account. The system
used by the bank or other service determines if
you need short or long DTMF tones. If the service
is digital, as most are, short DTMF tones will
almost always work.
Sound
67
Power On/Off Melody
(Menu 4-5)
You can activate or deactivate the tone that the
phone sounds when it is switched on or off.
68
Display
The Display feature enables you to customize
various settings for the display and the light.
Bahasa
(Menu 5-1)
This menu allows you to change the display and
input language.
You can choose a language either
English
or
Indonesia
.
Wallpaper
(Menu 5-2)
You can select the background image (wallpaper)
to be displayed in Standby mode.
When you set this menu to
Digital Clock1
, the
phone displays the text message you entered
using the
Banner
menu (
Menu 5-3
) in Standby
mode.
Display
69
Banner
(Menu 5-3)
This option allows you to set a banner message to
display at the bottom of the display in Standby
mode. However, the banner massage could be
displayed, when the Wallpaper is setted on Digital
Clock1.
1. If necessary, press repeatedly to delete
each letter of the old greeting. Press and hold
to clear the display.
2. Enter your banner message of up to 15
characters.
For further information about how to enter
characters, see page 30.
3. When you finish entering the message, press
the
Save
soft key to store the new banner.
Backlight
(Menu 5-4)
You have several options for setting how the
backlight operates. Remember that backlight use
drains your battery faster.
The following options are available:
Always On
: the backlight is always on.
Always Off
: the backlight is always off.
8/15/30 Seconds
: the backlight switches on
when you press a key and switches off after 8/15/
30 seconds if you don’t press any key.
Display
70
LCD Contrast
(Menu 5-5)
The menu allows you to adjust the brightness of
the LCD screen.
Press to make the brightness of screen letters
lighter, and to make it darker.
Each time you press the key, you will see the
selected status of the brightness of letters.
Press the
Select
soft key to save what you set the
value of color.
Shortcut Indicator
(Menu 5-6)
In this menu, you can set whether or not the
menu shortcut indicators are displayed on the dial
screen.
While dialing numbers in Standby mode, you can
press the appropriate Navigation key to access the
preset menu you want.
71
Organiser
The Organiser feature enables you to:
keep track of important dates and events
create a list of things to do
make a memo
set an alarm to ring at a specific time
use the phone as a calculator
check the time in another part of the world
use the countdown timer.
Scheduler
(Menu 6-1)
In this menu, you can keep track of your daily or
monthly schedule. You can create up to 70 events.
Note
: You can quickly access this menu by pressing
in Standby mode.
Today
(Menu 6-1-1)
You can schedule up to 9 events for the current
day, indicating each event’s start and end time.
You can even have your phone's calendar alert
you before an event starts. Events scheduled for
future dates automatically appear on your Today
display for that particular day.
Scheduling a New Event
1. Enter your event contents and press the
Next
soft key.
For more information about entering letters,
see page 30.
Organiser
72
2. Enter the start time and date and press the
Next
soft key.
Notes
:
• Your phone uses 12-hour format. After
entering the time, press
A
to set AM or
P
to
set PM.
• You can move through the input fields using the
Navigation keys.
3. Enter the end time and date and press the
Next
soft key.
4. Select when an alarm will inform you of the
event by pressing or .
Selecting
No alarm
means that the phone
doesn’t ring the alarm.
5. Press the
Save
soft key to store your event.
Viewing Your Today’s Schedule
The list of the events stored on the current day
displays when you select the
Today
menu (
Menu
6-1-1
).
While viewing the schedule list:
Press the
Options
soft key to use the following
options:
Add New
: allows you to add a new event.
Erase
: allows you to erase the selected event.
Erase
Passed
: allows you to erase the passed
events.
Erase All
: allows you to erase all of the events.
To view details, press the Navigation keys to
scroll to an event and press the
View
soft key.
The event displays along with its start time and
date. To view the end time, press .
Organiser
73
While viewing the event, press the
Edit
soft key
to edit it. Press the
Erase
soft key to erase it.
All
(Menu 6-1-2)
This menu allows you to view the current month,
as well as past or future months, in calendar
format. On the calendar, the current day is
highlighted.
Scrolling Through the Calendar
You can move to the left or right by one day by
pressing or and or .
You can move up or down by one week by
pressing or and or .
On the calendar, press the
View
soft key to view
the scheduled events of the selected day.
Press the
Options
soft key to use the following
options:
Add New
: allows you to add a new event for the
selected day.
Erase All
: allows you to erase all of the events.
List View
: allows you to view all of the events.
Creating a New Schedule
You can store up to 70 events total in the
scheduler, with up to 9 events for one day.
1. Select a day on the calendar, referring to
“Scrolling Through the Calendar” above.
When you are storing a event for the first
time, skip to step 3.
2. Press the
Options
soft key and select
Add
New
option.
Organiser
74
3. Enter your event contents and press the
Next
soft key.
For more information about entering letters,
see page 30.
4. Enter the start time and date and press the
Next
soft key.
Notes
:
• Your phone uses 12-hour format. After
entering the time, press
A
to set AM or
P
to
set PM.
• You can move through the input fields using the
Navigation keys.
5. Enter the end time and date and press the
Next
soft key.
6. Select when an alarm will inform you of the
event by pressing or .
Selecting
No alarm
means that the phone
doesn’t ring the alarm.
7. Press the
Save
soft key to store your event.
Viewing Your Schedule
Select a day with scheduled events on the
calendar, referring to “Scrolling Through the
Calendar” on page 73 and press the
View
soft
key.
To view details, press the Navigation keys to scroll
to an event and press the
View
soft key. The
event displays along with its start time and date.
To view the end time, press .
While viewing the event, press the
Edit
soft key to
edit it. Press the
Erase
soft key to erase it.
Organiser
75
Task List
(Menu 6-2)
This menu allows you to enter up a list of tasks to
be done and assign a deadline to each task. You
can create up to 9 tasks.
Creating a New Task
1. Enter the first task and press the
Next
soft
key.
For further details on how to enter characters,
see page 30.
2. Enter the time and date by which the task
needs to be done.
Notes
:
• Your phone uses 12-hour format. After
entering the time, press
A
to set AM or
P
to
set PM.
• You can move through the input fields using the
Navigation keys.
3. Press the
Save
soft key to store the task.
Viewing a Task
The list of the tasks displays when you access the
Task List
menu (
Menu 6-2
).
While viewing the task list:
Press the
Options
soft key to use the following
options:
Add new
: allows you to add a new task.
Erase
: allows you to erase the selected task.
Erase all
: allows you to erase all of the tasks.
Organiser
76
To view details, press or to scroll to a
task and press the
View
soft key.
While viewing the task, press the
Edit
soft key
to edit it. Press the
Erase
soft key to erase it
Memo Pad
(Menu 6-3)
This menu allows you to write down memos about
anything you need to remember. You can create
up to 9 memos.
Writing a New Memo
1. Enter the memo.
For further details on how to enter characters,
see page 30.
2. Press the
Save
soft key to store the memo.
Viewing a Memo
The list of your memos displays when you access
the
Memo Pad
menu (
Menu 6-3
).
While viewing the memo list:
Press the
Options
soft key to use the following
options:
Add new
: allows you to add a new memo.
Erase
: allows you to erase the selected memo.
Erase all
: allows you to erase all of the memos.
To view details, press or to scroll to a
memo and press the
View
soft key.
Organiser
77
While viewing the memo, press the
Edit
soft
key to edit the memo. Press the
Erase
soft key
to erase the memo.
Alarm
(Menu 6-4)
This menu allows you to set up to an alarm to ring
at a specific time.
To set an alarm:
1. Select an alarm type,
Daily Alarm
or
Weekly
Alarm
, and press the
Select
soft key.
2. Select
On
by pressing or .
3. Press and enter the time for the alarm to
ring.
Notes
:
• Your phone uses 12-hour format. After
entering the time, press
A
to set AM or
P
to
set PM.
• You can move through the input fields using the
Navigation keys.
4. Press the
Next
soft key.
5. Select a Alarm option by pressing or .
You can choose either
Daily
or
Once
for the
daily alarm, or select a day of the week for the
weekly alarm. In case of weekly alarm, press
to select a day and to deselect a day.
6. Press and select an alarm melody by
pressing or .
7. Press the
Save
soft key to save the alarm
setting.
Organiser
78
To stop the alarm when it rings, press the
Stop
soft key, , or . If you stop the alarm using
other keys, the Snooze function is activated and
the phone alerts you to the alarm after 10
minutes. To deactivate the Snooze function, press
the
Stop
soft key, , or .
To deactivate an alarm setting, access it from the
alarm list and select
Off
.
Calculator
(Menu 6-5)
Using this feature, you can use the phone as a
calculator. The calculator provides the basic
arithmetic functions; addition, subtraction,
multiplication and division.
1. Enter the first number using the numeric keys.
Notes
:
• To erase any mistakes or clear the display,
press .
• Use to enter a decimal point and to
change the sign of a number to a negative (-).
2. Enter the operation for your calculation on the
second line by pressing the Navigation keys,
according to the graphic on the display.
3. Enter the second number.
4. Repeat steps 2 and 3 as many times, if
necessary.
5. To view the result, press the
Result
soft key.
6. To perform another calculation, press to
reset the calculator and repeat from step 1.
Organiser
79
World Time
(Menu 6-6)
This menu allows you to check the current times
for 34 major cities around the world or set DST
(Daylight Savings Time).
To check the world time and set your time zone:
1. Select the city corresponding to your time zone
by pressing the Navigation keys one or more
times.
The local time and date display.
2. Press the
Save
soft key to set the time as the
default time zone.
To turn on or off the DST setting:
1. After selecting the time zone to which you
want to apply the DST, press the
DST
soft key.
2. Press the
On
soft key.
To cancel the DST setting, press the
Off
soft
key.
Count Down
(Menu 6-7)
This menu helps you know how much time it takes
for you to do something, or how many months,
days, hours and minutes until a specific day
arrives. You can create up to 9 counters.
Creating a New Counter
1. Enter the contents for your counter and press
the
Next
soft key.
Organiser
80
For details about entering text, see page 30.
2. Enter the time and date you want to count
down from.
Notes
:
• Your phone uses 12-hour format. After
entering the time, press
A
to set AM or
P
to
set PM.
• You can move through the input fields using the
Navigation keys.
• Enter a year between 1980 and 2099.
3. Press the
Save
soft key to store the counter.
Viewing a Counter
The list of the counters displays when you access
the
Count Down
menu option (
Menu 6-7
).
While viewing the counter list:
Press the
Options
soft key to use the following
options:
Add New
: allows you to add a new counter.
Erase
: allows you to erase the selected
counter.
Erase Passed
: allows you to erase the passed
counters.
Erase All
: allows you to erase all of the
counters.
To view details, press or to scroll to a
counter and press the
View
soft key.
While viewing a counter, press the
Edit
soft key
to edit it. Press the
Erase
soft key to erase it.
81
Settings
Many different features of your phone can be
customised to suit your preferences.
Call
(Menu 7-1)
This menu contains the suboptions for answering
or redialling a call.
Answer Mode
(Menu 7-1-1)
This menu allows you to select how to answer an
incoming call.
The following options are available:
Any Key
: the phone answers when you press any
key except for and the
Silence
soft key.
Call Key
: the phone answers only when you press
.
Auto Redial
(Menu 7-1-2)
When this menu is activated, your phone
automatically redials the call up to 10 times when
a connection fails.
To activate this feature, select how often the
phone automatically retries the call;
60
,
30
and
10 seconds
are available.
Select
Off
to deactivate the Auto Redial feature.
Settings
82
Phone/System
(Menu 7-2)
Dial Short Cut
(Menu 7-2-1)
You can set up a menu of your own using your
favourite menu items, which can then be accessed
by specific number keys. Once you have set up
your favourites, you can easily and quickly access
them.
To set up the favourite item access:
1. Select a location using the Navigation keys and
press the
Assign
soft key.
To deactivates the assignment to the selected
key, press the
Erase
soft key.
2. Scroll to the menu you want by pressing the
Navigation keys.
3. Select the menu you want and press the
Assign
soft key.
To access the favourite item:
1. In Standby mode, press the number key
corresponding to the item you want to access.
2. press the
Menu
soft key.
Key Guard
(Menu 7-2-2)
You can prevent accidental key pressing by using
Key Guard mode.
To activate the Key Guard feature, select the
period of time your phone waits for before locking
the keypad. If you do not want to use the feature,
set this menu to
Off
.
Settings
83
When you have an incoming call or the time for an
alarm comes in Key Guard mode, the mode is
automatically deactivated and the phone goes to
Standby mode. It will be automatically activated
after the specified amount of time when you end
the call or stop the alarm.
Once Key Guard mode is activated, you can
temporarily unlock your keypad by pressing
and .
N
ote
:
• You can lock the keypad manually by pressing and
holding in Standby mode.
• In Key Guard mode, you cannot make an
emergency call. You should unlock the keypad
before making a call.
Set Time
(Menu 7-2-3)
To display the correct date and time on the idle
screen or to use the Organiser features, such as
Scheduler, Task List, Countdown, Alarm and World
Time, you need to set the current time and date
using this menu.
Enter the time and date using the numeric keys.
Each of the hour, minute, day, and month must be
entered using 2 digits and the year requires all 4
digits. Your phone uses 12-hour format. After
entering the time, press
A
to set AM or
P
to set
PM. Network time is set automatically.
Version
(Menu 7-2-4)
This option allows you to view the software and
hardware versions of your phone. This feature is
helpful if you need to the call customer care.
Settings
84
Security
(Menu 7-3)
Your phone provides you with many security
options, including a user-programmable lock code.
To access the
Security
menu, you need to enter a
lock code.
The lock code is preset to “0000” at
the factory
.
Lock Mode
(Menu 7-3-1)
When the phone is locked, you cannot operate the
phone until you enter the Lock code.
The following options are available:
Never
: the phone remains unlocked.
On power up
: the phone locks automatically the
next time you turn it on.
Now
: the phone locks immediately.
To place an emergency call, enter the number and
then press . The phone recognises three
emergency numbers stored in the
Emergency
Numbers
menu (
Menu 7-3-3
).
To unlock the phone, press the
Unlock
soft keys
and enter the lock code. The phone returns to
Standby mode.
Change Code
(Menu 7-3-2)
This feature allows you to change your current
lock code to a new one. The lock code is preset to
“0000” at the factory.
Enter a new four-digit lock code and then enter
the code again to confirm.
Settings
85
Emergency Numbers
(Menu 7-3-3)
Your phone provides you with the option for
storing three emergency numbers.The default
numbers are 110, 112, 113 and 118. All of these
numbers can be manually dialled at any time even
when your phone is locked.
IMPORTANT NOTICE!
Emergency calling may not be available on all
wireless networks at all times. A connection
cannot always be guaranteed, due to various
transmission methods, network parameters and
user settings used to complete a call from your
wireless phone.
DO NOT depend on this phone as a primary
method of dialling 110 or for any other essential
or emergency communications.
Remember to always turn your phone on and
check for the adequate signal strength before
placing a call.
To store an emergency number:
1. Press or to select a location and press
the
Select
soft key.
2. Enter the number you want to use.
Each emergency number can be up to 32 digits
long. The number already stored in the
selected location is automatically deleted when
you enter a new number.
3. Press the
Save
soft key to store the number.
To make an emergency call in Lock mode, simply
enter a programmed number, and then press .
Settings
86
Voice Privacy
(Menu 7-3-4)
Used only in digital networks, Voice Privacy
encrypts the voice channel so that people cannot
eavesdrop on your conversation.
The following options are available:
Standard
: The phone will use a standard line for
calls.
Enhanced
: The phone will make and receive calls
on an encrypted high security line.
Note
:
• This feature may not be available in all areas.
Contact your service provider for its details and
availability.
• You can use this menu during a conversation. For
further details about options during a call, see
page 28.
Clear Phone Book
(Menu 7-3-5)
This menu allows you to erase all of the numbers
in your Phone Book. When a confirmation
message displays, press the
Yes
soft key.
Reset Phone
(Menu 7-3-6)
Resetting the phone cancels all of your selection in
the user-selectable setting options and returns
them to the factory default settings.
When a confirmation message appears, press the
Yes
soft key. The phone turns itself off and back
on and then returns to Standby mode.
Settings
87
Clear SMS Groups
(Menu 7-3-7)
This menu allows you to erase all of the members
in your SMS Groups. When a confirmation
message displays, press the
Yes
soft key.
88
Games
You can experience the fun of playing games on
your phone.
Note
: You can quickly access this menu by pressing
in Standby mode.
You can enjoy five fun games on your phone:
Child Monk Adventure
(MENU 8-1)
•Black Planet
(MENU 8-2)
•Hello Monkey
(MENU 8-3)
•Bowling
(MENU 8-4)
•Othello
(MENU 8-5)
To start a game:
1. Select a game by pressing the Navigation keys
and press the
Select
key.
2. On the startup screen, press any key. For
Othello
, press the
Start
soft key.
The following options are available:
NEW GAME
: starts a new game.
LOAD GAME
: loads the last game you
played, if you are interrupted during a game.
KEY CONTROL
: opens the screen showing
the key operations for the game.
GAME INFO
: opens the help screen for the
game.
3. Select
NEW GAME
or
LOAD GAME
and press
the
Select
soft key.
Games
89
4. Follow the directions on the game screen.
5. To end the game, press . If a confirmation
message appears, Press or select
Yes
and
press the left soft key.
Note
: If the battery is low, the
Game
wouldn’t be
accessed. Charge the battery before using it.
Settings
(Menu 8-6)
This menu allows you to change the volume for
the game sound and turn on or off the backlight
during a game.
Volume
(Menu 8-6-1)
This menu allows you to adjust the volume of the
game sound.
Silent
: the game is played in a silent mode.
Level 1
~
5
: adjust the volume level. The more
bars you see, the louder the volume is.
Backlight
(Menu 8-6-2)
Playing a game consumes the battery power more
than using other functions of your phone. This
menu allows you to activate or deactivate the
backlight during the game to conserve your
battery.
90
Health and Safety
Information
Exposure to Radio Frequency (RF)
Signals
Your wireless phone is a radio transmitter and
receiver. It is designed and manufactured not to
exceed the emission limits for exposure to radio
frequency (RF) energy set by the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) 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 the safety standards that
were developed by independent scientific
organizations through periodic and through
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 phones
employs a unit of measurement known as Specific
Absorption Rate (SAR). The SAR limit set by the
FCC is 1.6W/kg
*
.
* In the U.S. 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.
Health and Safety Information
91
SAR tests are conducted using standard operating
positions specified by the FCC with the phone
transmitting at its highest certified power level in
all tested frequency bands. Although the SAR is
determined at the highest certified power level,
the actual SAR level of the phone while operating
can be well below the maximum value. This is
because the phone is designed to operate at
multiple power levels so as to use only the power
required to reach the network. In general, the
closer you are to a wireless base station antenna,
the lower the power output of the phone.
Before a new model phone is available for sale to
the public, it must be tested and certified to the
FCC that it does not exceed the limit established
by the government-adopted requirement for safe
exposure. The tests are performed in positions
and locations (e.g., at the ear and worn on the
body) as required by the FCC for each model.
The highest SAR values for this model phone as
reported to the FCC are Head: 1.38W/Kg, Body-
worn: 1.36W/Kg.
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
A3LSCHN380.
Health and Safety Information
92
For Body Operation
To maintain compliance with FCC RF exposure requirements,
use only belt-clips, holsters or similar accessories that
maintain a 1.5 cm. separation distance between the
user's body and the back of the phone, including the
antenna. The use of belt-clips, holsters and similar
accessories should not contain metallic components
in its assembly. The use of accessories that do not
satisfy these requirements may not comply with FCC
RF exposure requirements, and should be avoided.
For more Information concerning exposure to
radio frequency signals, see the following
websites:
Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
http://www.fcc.gov/oet/rfsafety
Cellular Telecommunications Industry Association
(CTIA): http://www.wow-com.com
U.S.Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
http://www.fda.gov/cdrh/consumer
World Health Organization (WHO)
http://www.who.int/peh-emf/en
Precautions When Using Batteries
Never use any charger or battery that is
damaged in any way.
Use the battery only for its intended purpose.
Health and Safety Information
93
If you use the phone near the network’s base
station, it uses less power; talk and standby
time are greatly affected by the signal strength
on the cellular network and the parameters set
by the network operator.
Battery charging time depends on the remaining
battery charge and the type of battery and
charger used. The battery can be charged and
discharged hundreds of times, but it will
gradually wear out. When the operation time,
including talk time and standby time, is
noticeably shorter than normal, it is time to buy
a new battery.
If left unused, a fully charged battery will
discharge itself over time.
Use only Samsung-approved batteries and
recharge your battery only with Samsung-
approved chargers. When a charger is not in
use, disconnect it from the power source. Do
not leave the battery connected to a charger for
more than a week, since overcharging may
shorten its life.
Extreme temperatures will affect the charging
capacity of your battery: it may require cooling
or warming first.
Do not leave the battery in hot or cold places,
such as in a car in summer or winter conditions,
as you will reduce the capacity and life-time of
the battery. Always try to keep the battery at
room temperature. A phone with a hot or cold
battery may temporarily not work, even when
the battery is fully charged. Li-ion batteries are
particularly affected by temperatures below 0
°C (32 °F).
Health and Safety Information
94
Do not short-circuit the battery. Accidental short
circuiting can occur when a metallic object
(coin, clip or pen) causes a direct connection
between the + and – terminals of the battery
(metal strips on the battery), for example when
you carry a spare battery in a pocket or bag.
Short-circuiting the terminals may damage the
battery or the object causing the short-circuit.
Dispose of used batteries in accordance with
local regulations. Always recycle. Do not dispose
of batteries in a fire.
Road Safety
Your wireless phone gives you the powerful ability
to communicate by voice, almost anywhere,
anytime. But an important responsibility
accompanies the benefits of wireless phones, one
that every user must uphold.
When driving a car, driving is your first
responsibility. When using your wireless phone
behind the wheel of a car, make sure that you are
following the special regulations in a given area or
country.
Operating Environment
Remember to follow any special regulations in
force in any area and always switch off your phone
whenever it is forbidden to use it, or when it may
cause interference or danger.
When connecting the phone or any accessory to
another device, read its user’s guide for detailed
safety instructions. Do not connect incompatible
products.
Health and Safety Information
95
As with other mobile radio transmitting
equipment, users are advised that for the
satisfactory operation of the equipment and for
the safety of personnel, it is recommended that
the equipment should only be used in the normal
operating position (held to your ear with the
antenna pointing over your shoulder).
Electronic Devices
Most modern electronic equipment are shielded
from radio frequency (RF) signals. However,
certain electronic equipment may not be shielded
against the RF signals from your wireless phone.
Consult the manufacturer of the device to discuss
alternatives.
Pacemakers
Pacemaker manufacturers recommend that a
minimum distance of 15 cm (6 inches) be
maintained between a wireless phone and a
pacemaker to avoid potential interference with the
pacemaker. These recommendations are
consistent with the independent research and
recommendations of Wireless Technology
Research.
Persons with pacemakers:
should always keep the phone more than 15 cm
(6 inches) from their pacemaker when the
phone is switched on;
should not carry the phone in a breast pocket;
should use the ear opposite the pacemaker to
minimise potential interference.
Health and Safety Information
96
If you have any reason to suspect that
interference is taking place, switch off your phone
immediately.
Hearing Aids
Some digital wireless phones may interfere with
some hearing aids. In the event of such
interference, you may wish to consult your
hearing aid manufacturer to discuss alternatives.
Other Medical Devices
If you use any other personal medical devices,
consult the manufacturer of your device to
determine if it is adequately shielded from
external RF energy. Your physician may be able to
assist you in obtaining this information. Switch off
your phone in health care facilities when any
regulations posted in these areas instruct you to
do so. Hospitals or health care facilities may be
using equipment that could be sensitive to
external RF energy.
Vehicles
RF signals may affect improperly installed or
inadequately shielded electronic systems in motor
vehicles. Check with the manufacturer or its
representative regarding your vehicle.
You should also consult the manufacturer of any
equipment that has been added to your vehicle.
Health and Safety Information
97
Posted Facilities
Switch off your phone in any facility where posted
notices require you to do so.
Potentially Explosive Atmosphere
Switch off your phone when in any area with a
potentially explosive atmosphere and obey all
signs and instructions. Sparks in such areas could
cause an explosion or fire resulting in bodily injury
or even death.
Users are advised to switch off the phone while at
a refuelling point (service station). Users are
reminded of the need to observe restrictions on
the use of radio equipment in fuel depots (fuel
storage and distribution areas), chemical plants or
where blasting operations are in progress.
Areas with a potentially explosive atmosphere are
often but not always clearly marked. They include
below deck on boats, chemical transfer or storage
facilities, vehicles using liquefied petroleum gas
(such as propane or butane), areas where the air
contains chemicals or particles, such as grain,
dust or metal powders, and any other area where
you would normally be advised to turn off your
vehicle engine.
Health and Safety Information
98
Emergency Calls
This phone, like any wireless phone, operates
using radio signals, wireless and landline networks
as well as user-programmed functions, which
cannot guarantee connection in all conditions.
Therefore, you should never rely solely on any
wireless phone for essential communications
(medical emergencies, for example).
Remember, to make or receive any calls the phone
must be switched on and in a service area with
adequate signal strength. Emergency calls may
not be possible on all wireless phone networks or
when certain network services and/or phone
features are in use. Check with local service
providers.
To make an emergency call:
1. If the phone is not on, switch it on.
2. Key in the emergency number for your present
location. Emergency numbers vary by location.
3. Press .
When making an emergency call, remember to
give all the necessary information as accurately as
possible. Remember that your phone may be the
only means of communication at the scene of an
accident; do not cut off the call until given
permission to do so.
Health and Safety Information
99
Other Important Safety Information
Only qualified personnel should service the
phone or install the phone in a vehicle. Faulty
installation or service may be dangerous and
may invalidate any warranty applicable to the
device.
Check regularly that all wireless phone
equipment in your vehicle is mounted and
operating properly.
Do not store or carry flammable liquids, gases
or explosive materials in the same compartment
as the phone, its parts or accessories.
For vehicles equipped with an air bag,
remember that an air bag inflates with great
force. Do not place objects, including both
installed or portable wireless equipment in the
area over the air bag or in the air bag
deployment area. If wireless equipment is
improperly installed and the air bag inflates,
serious injury could result.
Switch off your phone before boarding an
aircraft. The use of wireless phones in aircraft
may be dangerous to the operation of the
aircraft, and is illegal.
Failure to observe these instructions may lead
to the suspension or denial of telephone
services to the offender, or legal action, or both.
Care and Maintenance
Your phone is a product of superior design and
craftsmanship and should be treated with care.
The suggestions below will help you fulfill any
Health and Safety Information
100
warranty obligations and allow you to enjoy this
product for many years.
Keep the phone and all its parts and accessories
out of the reach of small children.
Keep the phone dry. Precipitation, humidity and
liquids contain minerals that will corrode
electronic circuits.
Do not touch the phone with a wet hand. Doing
so may cause an electric shock to you or
damage to the phone.
Do not use or store the phone in dusty, dirty
areas, as its moving parts may be damaged.
Do not store the phone in hot areas. High
temperatures can shorten the life of electronic
devices, damage batteries, and warp or melt
certain plastics.
Do not store the phone in cold areas. When the
phone warms up to its normal operating
temperature, moisture can form inside the
phone, which may damage the phone’s
electronic circuit boards.
Do not drop, knock or shake the phone. Rough
handling can break internal circuit boards.
Do not use harsh chemicals, cleaning solvents
or strong detergents to clean the phone. Wipe it
with a soft cloth slightly dampened in a mild
soap-and-water solution.
Do not paint the phone. Paint can clog the
device’s moving parts and prevent proper
operation.
Do not put the phone in or on heating devices,
such as a microwave oven, a stove or a radiator.
The phone may explode when overheated.
Health and Safety Information
101
Use only the supplied or an approved
replacement antenna. Unauthorized antennas or
modified accessories may damage the phone
and violate regulations governing radio devices.
If the phone, battery, charger or any accessory
is not working properly, take it to your nearest
qualified service facility. The personnel there will
assist you, and if necessary, arrange for service.
102
Glossary
To help you understand the main technical terms
and abbreviations used in this booklet, and to take
full advantage of the features of your mobile
phone, here are a few definitions:
Airtime
Actual time spent talking on the wireless phone.
Most carriers bill customers based on how many
minutes of airtime they use each month.
Antenna
A device for transmitting or receiving signals. The
size and shape of antennas is determined, in part,
by the frequency of the signal they receive.
Wireless phones and the base station must have
antennas.
Base Station
The fixed radio transmitter/receiver that maintains
communications with mobile radio telephones
within a given area. (Typically called a cell or cell
site)
CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access)
A spread-spectrum approach to digital
transmission. With CDMA, each conversation is
digitized and then tagged with a code. The mobile
phone deciphers only a particular code to pick the
right conversation off the air. The transmitted
signal is just above noise level across the available
bandwidth.
Glossary
103
Channel
Communications signals transmit along paths
called channels.
Codec
Compression & Decompression.
Deactivation
The process of rendering a wireless phone
inactive.
DTMF (Dual-tone Multi-Frequency )
You send DTMF signals when you enter numbers
by pressing the digit keys.
EVRC
(Enhanced Variable Rate Codec) EVRC is a new
global standard for compressing and
decompressing voice signals. EVRC uses a lower
bit rate (the number of bits sent per second) than
existing CDMA vocoders, while providing
significant improvements in voice quality. This
technology enables your phone to provide superb
voice quality while benefiting from the ability to
process more cellular voice calls using less
bandwidth than the voice codecs in CDMA
networks today.
Frequency
A measure based on time, as one or more waves
per second, in an electrical or light wave
information signal. A signal’s frequency is stated
in cycles-per-second or Hertz (Hz).
Glossary
104
LCD (Liquid Crystal Display)
Commonly used to refer to the screen display on
the wireless phone.
LED (Light Emitting Diode)
Commonly used to refer to a small light on the
wireless phone or on the Desktop Charger. The
LED lights on the phone to indicate an incoming
call. The lights on the charger indicate that battery
charging is taking place.
Prepend
The addition of a prefix, such as an area code, to a
phone number.
RF
Radio Frequency
Roaming
The ability to use a wireless phone to make and
receive calls in places outside of the home service
area.
Service Charge
The amount paid each month to receive wireless
service.
Standby Time
The amount of time a fully charged wireless
portable or transportable phone can be on and idle
without being in use. (See Talk Time)
Glossary
105
Talk Time
The length of time a person can talk on a portable
or transportable wireless phone without
recharging the battery.
Vocoder
Voice Coder. A device used to convert speech into
digital signals.
Wireless
Radio-based Systems that allow transmission of
telephone or data signals through the air without a
physical connection, such as a metal wire (copper)
or fiber optic cable.
106
Index
123
1-beep mode
20
A
Accessories
7
Air time
63
Alarm
77
Alert tones, set
66
Alphabet mode, text input
33
Answer mode
81
Auto redial
81
B
Background image
68
Backlight
12
,
69
Banner
69
Battery
charging
14
installing
13
low battery indicator
15
precautions
92
C
Calculator
78
Calendar
73
Call
answering
27
ending
22
from Phone Book
22
making
21
Call duration
63
Call history
dialled calls
62
missed calls
60
received calls
62
Caller group
changing
48
finding
44
Caller ID
29
Characters, enter
30
Charging battery
14
Connect tone
66
Contrast, display
70
Countdown
79
D
Date, set
83
Dialled calls
62
Dialling options
21
Disconnect tone
66
Display
backlight
12
contrast
70
icons
11
language
68
layout
11
DST (Daylight Savings
Time), set
79
DTMF tones, send
25
E
Emergency calls
23
,
98
Emergency numbers
85
Erasing
call history
61
,
62
countdown
80
memos
76
messages
55
phone book
43
,
86
schedule
72
,
73
tasks
75
G
Games
88
Groups
caller
48
SMS
58
H
Health and safety
90
Index
107
I
Icons, description •
11
Inbox, messages
52
Installing battery
13
K
Key guard mode
19
,
82
Key tone
length
66
swithching on/off
28
volume
66
Keys
description
9
location
8
L
Language, select
68
Lock code, change
84
Lock mode
19
,
84
Low battery indicator
15
M
Memo pad
76
Menus
accessing
36
list
38
shortcuts
37
Messages
draft
53
inbox
52
outbox
53
settings
55
templates
54
writing
50
Missed calls
29
,
60
N
Name
finding
42
storing
45
Number, phone
finding
42
storing
45
O
On/Off switch, phone
16
Organiser
71
Outbox, messages
53
P
Phone
care and maintenance
99
display
11
icons
11
keys
9
layout
8
locking
84
modes
18
resetting
86
switching on/off
16
unpacking
7
Phone book
adding entry
45
clearing
86
finding entry
42
memory status
49
Power on/off melody
67
R
Radio frequency
90
Receivec calls
62
Received messages
52
Redialling
automatically
81
manually
23
Resetting phone
86
Ring tones
64
Ringer volume
65
Road safety
94
S
Safety
information
90
precautions
5
Index
108
Scheduler
71
Security
84
,
89
Sent messages
53
SMS groups
58
Soft keys
17
Sound settings
64
Speed dialling
24
Standby mode
18
Switching on/off phone
16
T
T9(English) mode, text input
32
Talk mode
18
Task list
75
Templates, message
54
Text input modes
30
Text messages
50
Text, enter
30
Time, set
83
Today schedule
71
Tone
connect
66
disconnect
66
key
66
power on/off
67
ringer
64
Travel adapter
14
U
Unpacking
7
V
Version
83
Vibrate mode
20
Voice mail
57
Voice privacy
28
,
86
W
Wallpaper
68
World time
79
Writing a message
50
109
Internal Phone Book
Save a
number Enter number +
Save
+
Select
+ Enter name +
Next
+ / (Label) +
Select
+ / (Entry
options) + / to
change the settings or
Edit
enter information +
Save
Speed dial • For the entry numbers
of one digit, press and
hold the corresponding
digit key.
• For the other entry
numbers, press the
first digit key(s) briefly,
and hold down the last
digit key.
Phone Book
Search Press the
Find
soft key +
/ +
/ +
Select
or
Basic Operation
Make a call Phone number +
End a call
Answer a call
Redial the last
outgoing call twice or press and
hold
Switch to
Vibrate mode (in Standby mode)
Hold
Switch to 1-
Beep mode (in Standby mode)
Hold
0
Lock the
keypad (in Standby mode)
Hold
Unlock the
keypad
C
+
Enter Lock
Mode Menu 7-3-1 + Select
Lock type +
Select
SCH-N380 Quick Reference Card
110
1: Phone Book 1: Find
2: Add Entry
3: Groups
4: Memory Status
2: Messages 1: Write
2: Inbox
3: Outbox
4: Drafts
5: Templates
6: Erase Messages
7: Settings
8: Voice Mail
9: SMS Groups
0: One Touch Paging
3: Call History 1: Missed
2: Received
3: Dialled
4: Erase History
5: Call Duration
4: Sound 1: Ring Tones
2: Ringer Volume
3: Alerts
4: Key Tone
5: Power On/Off Melody
5: Display 1: Bahasa
2: Wallpaper
3: Banner
4: Backlight
5: LCD Contrast
6: Shortcut Indicator
6: Organiser 1: Scheduler
2: Task List
3: Memo Pad
4: Alarm
5: Calculator
6: World Time
7: Count Down
7: Settings 1: Call
1: Answer Mode
2: Auto Redial
2: Phone/System
1: Dial Short Cut
2: Key Guard
3: Set Time
4: Version
3: Security
1: Lock Mode
2: Change Code
3: Emergency Numbers
4: Voice Privacy
5: Clear Phone Book
6: Reset Phone
7: Clear SMS Groups
8: Games 1: Child Monk Adventure
2: Black Planet
3: Hello Monkey
4: Bowling
5: Othello
6: Settings
Main Menu
(To access, press the
Menu
soft key.)
Licensed by QUALCOMM Incorporated under one or more
of the following Patents.
U.S Patent No. 4,901,307 5,056,109 5,099,204
5,101,501 5,103,459 5,107,225
5,109,390

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