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
174
(AAMI). The final draft, a joint effort by FDA, medical device manufacturers, and
many other groups, was completed in late 2000. This standard will allow
manufacturers to ensure that cardiac pacemakers and defibrillators are safe from
wireless phone EMI. FDA has tested hearing aids for interference from handheld
wireless phones and helped develop a voluntary standard sponsored by the Institute
of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE). This standard specifies test methods
and performance requirements for hearing aids and wireless phones so that no
interference occurs when a person uses a compatible phone and a accompanied
hearing aid at the same time. This standard was approved by the IEEE in 2000.
FDA continues to monitor the use of wireless phones for possible interactions with
other medical devices. Should harmful interference be found to occur, FDA will
conduct testing to assess the interference and work to resolve the problem.
12. Where can I find additional information?
For additional information, please refer to the following resources:
• FDA web page on wireless phones
http://www.fda.gov/cdrh/phones/index.html
• Federal Communications Commission (FCC) RF Safety Program
http://www.fcc.gov/oet/rfsafety
• International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection
http://www.icnirp.de
• World Health Organization (WHO) International EMF Project
http://www.who.int/emf
• National Radiological Protection Board (UK)
http://www.nrpb.org.uk/
July 18, 2001For updates: http://www.fda.gov/cdrh/phones