User Manual
Table Of Contents
- Content
- For your safety
- General information
- 1. Getting started
- 2. Your phone
- 3. Call functions
- 4. Writing text
- 5. Personal information
- 6. Media
- 7. Messaging
- Writing and sending messages
- Inbox - receiving messages
- My folders
- Mailbox
- Outbox
- Viewing messages on a SIM card
- Cell broadcast
- Service command editor
- Messaging settings
- Chat
- 8. Tools
- 9. Personalising your phone
- 10. Extras
- 11. Services and Applications
- 12. Connectivity
- 13. Troubleshooting
- 14. Technical Information
Additional safety information
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To make an emergency call:
1. If the device is not on, switch it on. Check for adequate signal strength.
Some networks may require that a valid SIM card is properly inserted in the
device.
2. Press the end key as many times as needed to clear the display and ready the
device for calls.
3. Enter the official emergency number for your present location. Emergency
numbers vary by location.
4. Press the call key.
If certain features are in use, you may first need to turn those features off before
you can make an emergency call. If the device is in offline or flight mode you
must change the profile to activate the phone function before you can make an
emergency call. Consult this guide or your service provider for more information.
When making an emergency call, give all the necessary information as accurately
as possible. Your wireless device may be the only means of communication at the
scene of an accident. Do not end the call until given permission to do so.
■ Certification information (SAR)
THIS DEVICE MEETS THE GOVERNMENT’S REQUIREMENTS FOR EXPOSURE TO
RADIO WAVES.
Your mobile device is a radio transmitter and receiver. It is designed and
manufactured not to exceed the limits for exposure to radio frequency (RF)
energy adopted by the governments of the USA through the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) and Canada through Industry Canada (IC).
These limits establish permitted levels of RF energy for the general population.
The guidelines are based on standards that were developed by independent
scientific organizations through periodic and thorough evaluation of scientific
studies. The standards include a substantial safety margin designed to assure the
safety of all persons, regardless of age and health.
The exposure guidelines for mobile devices employ a unit of measurement known
as the Specific Absorption Rate or SAR. The SAR limit adopted by the USA and
Canada is 1.6 watts/ kilogram (W/kg) averaged over one gram of tissue. The limit
incorporates a substantial margin of safety to give additional protection for the
public and to account for any variations in measurements. Tests for SAR are
conducted using standard operating positions with the device transmitting at its
highest certified power level in all tested frequency bands. The actual SAR level
of an operating device can be well below the maximum value because the device
is designed to use only the power required to reach the network. That amount