User manual
Table Of Contents
- Nokia 6230 phone at a glance
- Quick guide
- Contents
- 1 For your safety
- 2 Overview of functions
- 3 About your phone
- 4 Basic operations
- 5 Text entry
- 6 Phone security
- 7 Messages
- . Linked messages
- . Before you can send and receive messages
- . Icons
- . Font size
- . Text and picture messages
- . Multimedia messages
- . Voice messages
- . Info message service
- . Service commands
- 8 Call log
- 9 Contacts
- . Menu
- . Types of information
- . Save information
- . Change the primary number
- . Search for an entry
- . Make a call
- . Add an image to a name or number
- . Edit an entry
- . Delete names and numbers
- . Presence service
- . Subscribed names
- . Copy entries
- . Business cards
- . 1-touch dialing
- . Voice dialing
- . Info, service, and my numbers
- . Caller groups
- . Select contacts view and memory
- 10 Operator menu
- 11 Settings
- . Profiles
- . Tone settings
- . Display settings
- . Time and date settings
- . Personal shortcuts
- . Connectivity
- . Call settings
- . Phone settings
- . Presence settings
- . Enhancement settings
- . Security settings
- . Restore factory settings
- 12 Gallery
- 13 Media
- 14 Organizer
- 15 Applications
- 16 Services
- . Set up for browsing
- . Sign on to the mobile Internet
- . Navigate the mobile Internet
- . Example of a mobile Internet site
- . Appearance settings
- . Bookmarks
- . Service inbox
- . File upload
- . File download
- . Disconnect from the mobile Internet
- . Receive a call while online
- . Make a call while online
- . Make an emergency call while online
- . Options while online
- . Security
- 17 SIM services
- 18 Hardware and enhancements
- 19 Reference Information
- Appendix A Message from the CTIA
- Appendix B Message from the FDA
- Index
171
Appendix B Message from the FDA
and other health agencies for safety questions about wireless phones. FCC also
regulates the base stations that the wireless phone networks rely upon. While these
base stations operate at higher power than do the wireless phones themselves, the
RF exposures that people get from these base stations are typically thousands of
times lower than those they can get from wireless phones. Base stations are thus not
the subject of the safety questions discussed in this document.
3. What kinds of phones are the subject of this update?
The term wireless phone refers here to hand-held wireless phones with built-in
antennas, often called cell mobile or PCS phones. These types of wireless phones
can expose the user to measurable radiofrequency energy (RF) because of the short
distance between the phone and the user’s head. These RF exposures are limited by
Federal Communications Commission safety guidelines that were developed with
the advice of FDA and other federal health and safety agencies. When the phone is
located at greater distances from the user, the exposure to RF is drastically lower
because a person's RF exposure decreases rapidly with increasing distance from the
source. The so-called cordless phones; which have a base unit connected to the
telephone wiring in a house, typically operate at far lower power levels, and thus
produce RF exposures far below the FCC safety limits.
4. What are the results of the research done already?
The research done thus far has produced conflicting results, and many studies have
suffered from flaws in their research methods. Animal experiments investigating the
effects of radiofrequency energy (RF) exposures characteristic of wireless phones
have yielded conflicting results that often cannot be repeated in other laboratories.
A few animal studies, however, have suggested that low levels of RF could accelerate
the development of cancer in laboratory animals. However, many of the studies that
showed increased tumor development used animals that had been genetically
engineered or treated with cancer-causing chemicals so as to be pre-disposed to
develop cancer in the absence of RF exposure. Other studies exposed the animals to
RF for up to 22 hours per day. These conditions are not similar to the conditions
under which people use wireless phones, so we don’t know with certainty what the
results of such studies mean for human health.
Three large epidemiology studies have been published since December 2000.
Between them, the studies investigated any possible association between the use of
wireless phones and primary brain cancer, glioma, meningioma, or acoustic
neuroma, tumors of the brain or salivary gland, leukemia, or other cancers. None
of the studies demonstrated the existence of any harmful health effects from
wireless phone RF exposures. However, none of the studies can answer questions
about long-term exposures, since the average period of phone use in these studies
was around three years.
5. What research is needed to decide whether RF exposure from wireless phones
poses a health risk?
A combination of laboratory studies and epidemiological studies of people actually
using wireless phones would provide some of the data that are needed. Lifetime
animal exposure studies could be completed in a few years. However, very large
numbers of animals would be needed to provide reliable proof of a cancer
promoting effect if one exists. Epidemiological studies can provide data that is
directly applicable to human populations, but 10 or more years follow-up may be