Reference Guide
Table Of Contents
- Getting Started
- What to Do First
- To Install the Battery
- To Charge the Battery
- Parts of Your Phone
- Screen Icons
- Menus
- Basic Functions
- Where to Get More Information
- Battery
- Calling
- Contacts
- Entering Text
- Working with Contact Cards
- Settings
- Messages
- Entering Text
- About Text Messages
- Retrieving Messages
- Sending Text Messages
- Message Delivery Options
- Erasing Messages
- Changing Your Voicemail Speed Dialing Location
- Alerts
- Troubleshooting Messages
- Tools
- Web Browser
- Frequently Asked Questions
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You can use your phone to browse the Internet if you have obtained phone Internet
services from your service provider and if over-the-air Internet access is available in
your area. Generally only those web sites which are provided by your wireless carrier
can be accessed from your phone.
You may have access to personal information such as email, your calendar, or a
personal address book. Your service provider determines which applications you can
use and will notify you when new applications become available.
If your service provider activated Internet services on your phone and you are in an area
that provides over-the-air Internet access, you may receive Net Alerts. These short
messages allow you to quickly access information on the Internet. They may include
stock quote alerts, traffic updates, or email. They are different from pages and text
messages because the information in Net Alerts is stored on the Web, not on your
phone. Accessing a Net Alert will launch the Internet browser on your phone and will
cause you to incur airtime charges.
Note: You cannot receive incoming calls while you are in the Web Browser and a data
call is in progress.
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■ Using the Web Browser page 78
■ Other Web Services page 80