User's Manual
Table Of Contents
- Legal notices
- Safety precautions
- Phone Overview
- Display symbols
- Getting started
- General instructions
- Standard functions
- Security
- Text entry
- Calling
- Contacts
- Phonebook
- Call records
- Internet
- Camera
- Message
- SMS
- MMS
- Voice mailbox/CB
- Organiser
- Games & App
- Ringtones
- Alarm clock
- Extra
- Settings
- Fast dial
- My Stuff
- Customer Care
- Care and maintenance
- Product Data
- U.S. FDA
- FCC/Industry Canada Notice
- Ten driving safety tips
- Intellectual property
- End user license agreement
- SAR (CL75)
- Menu tree
- Index
© Siemens AG 2003, D:\Werkstatt\CL75 am fcc\FDA.fm
67U.S. FDA
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• Cooperate in providing mobile
phone users with the best possible
information on what is known
about possible effects of mobile
phone use on human health.
• At the same time, FDA belongs to
an interagency working group of
the federal agencies that have re-
sponsibility for different aspects
of mobile phone safety to ensure
a coordinated effort at the federal
level. These agencies are:
• National Institute for Occupation-
al Safety and Health
• Environmental Protection Agency
• Federal Communications
Commission
• Occupational Health and Safety
Administration
• National Telecommunications and
Information Administration
The National Institutes of Health also
participates in this group.
In the absence of conclusive information
about any possible risk, what can con-
cerned individuals do?
If there is a risk from these products
– and at this point we do not know
that there is – it is probably very
small. But if people are concerned
about avoiding even potential risks,
there are simple steps they can take
to do so. For example, time is a key
factor in how much exposure a per-
son receives. Those persons who
spend long periods of time on their
hand-held mobile phones could con-
sider holding lengthy conversations
on conventional phones and reserv-
ing the hand-held models for shorter
conversations or for situations when
other types of phones are not
available.
People who must conduct extended
conversations in their cars every day
could switch to a type of mobile
phone that places more distance be-
tween their bodies and the source of
the RF, since the exposure level
drops off dramatically with distance.
For example, they could switch to:
• a mobile phone in which the an-
tenna is located outside the
vehicle,
• a hand-held phone with a built-in
antenna connected to a different
antenna mounted on the outside
of the car or built into a separate
package, or
• a headset with a remote antenna
to a mobile phone carried at the
waist.
Where can I find additional information?
For additional information, see the
following websites:
• Federal Communications Com-
mission (FCC) RF Safety Program
(select “Information on Human Ex-
posure to RF Fields from Cellular
and PCS Radio Transmitters”):
www.fcc.gov/oet/rfsafety