User's Manual
Table Of Contents
- Setup and basics
- Your device at a glance
- Insert the SIM card
- Insert a media card
- Move between home screens
- Get around with navigation buttons
- Touch screen gestures
- Motion gestures
- Apps, widgets, and shortcuts
- Personalizing your device
- Phone and voice
- Keyboard, language, and typing
- BlackBerry Keyboard and typing
- Using gestures with the slider keyboard
- Show or hide the touch screen keyboard
- Typing on the BlackBerry Keyboard
- Change the settings for keyboard, input, or typing
- Type more accurately with prediction and correction settings
- Type faster with key press feedback settings
- Select text using the BlackBerry Keyboard
- Cut, copy, and paste text
- Delete text using the BlackBerry Keyboard
- Use emojis
- Type using voice dictation
- Selecting word suggestions that appear while you type
- Spell check
- Creating custom text shortcuts
- Language
- Keyboard input methods
- BlackBerry Keyboard and typing
- Applications and features
- Settings
- Customize your device settings
- Overview of Quick Settings
- Overview of device settings
- Notifications
- Manage your notifications
- Change the volume of your notifications
- Change your notification sounds
- Change your Interruptions settings
- Turn off all sounds and notifications except calls
- Turn off all alerts
- Customize notifications for an app
- Customize lock screen notifications
- Add owner info to your lock screen
- BlackBerry Smart Flip Case
- Storage space and media cards
- Connections
- Wireless connection icons
- Choosing a connection
- Turn on airplane mode
- Mobile network
- Wi-Fi connections
- Bluetooth connections
- Turn on Bluetooth technology
- About pairing and connecting your device with a Bluetooth enabled device
- About using Google Voice Search™ when connected to a car kit
- Set which accounts Bluetooth enabled devices can access
- Change the name of your device for Bluetooth connections
- Change setup of a paired Bluetooth enabled device
- View a list of files you received over Bluetooth
- Disconnect from a Bluetooth enabled device
- Delete a paired Bluetooth enabled device
- Supported Bluetooth profiles
- Troubleshooting: Bluetooth connections
- NFC
- Tethering and mobile hotspot
- VPN connections
- Emergency broadcast messages
- Data usage
- Battery and power
- Display
- Accessibility
- Users
- Backup and reset
- Update your device software
- Security
- Legal notice
I keep losing the connection with my Bluetooth enabled car kit
• Check that your car kit is using the latest software version. For more information about your car kit's software version,
see the documentation that came with your car kit.
• Move your device to another location in your vehicle or turn your device to face another direction. The location of your
device's antenna in relation to your car kit's Bluetooth antenna may aect the Bluetooth connection.
I can't hear Google Voice Search
™
audio on my Bluetooth enabled device
Try any of the following:
• If your device is connected to a Bluetooth enabled headset or a car kit and you try to use Google Voice Search
™
, by
default Google Voice Search
™
uses the speaker and microphone on your BlackBerry device instead the speaker and
microphone on your Bluetooth enabled device. Turn on Bluetooth voice settings for Google Voice Search
™
. On the
home screen, tap
, and then open the Google
™
Settings app. Tap Search & Now > Voice. Turn on the Bluetooth
headset switch.
• Turn up the volume on the Bluetooth enabled device.
NFC
What is NFC?
NFC is a short-range wireless technology used to create a connection to share information between your device and other
NFC-enabled devices or NFC tags. Features on your device that use NFC technology include Android
™
Beam, Tap and Pay,
and Tap and Go.
Depending on the apps you have installed on your device and the NFC compatibility of other devices, some of the ways you
can use NFC include:
• Pass a picture to your friend.
• Tap an NFC tag to unlock your device using the Smart Lock feature.
• Grab a coupon from a poster you see on the street.
• Send a webpage you're viewing to a friend.
• Transfer your device data to a new device.
• Exchange contact cards with a new friend or business acquaintance.
• Tap an NFC-enabled printer to print a message from your device.
Some NFC apps are designed to simulate a physical card, such as a credit card, a public transit pass, or an access badge.
Some of the ways you can use these types of NFC apps include:
• Pay for your morning
coee without taking out your wallet.
• Pay for your bus or subway ride.
• Gain access to your building when you get to work.
User Guide
BlackBerry Strictly Confidential
Settings
84