User's Manual
Table Of Contents
- Samsung Galaxy Admire 2
- Table of Contents
- Section 1: Getting Started
- Heading 2 - Understanding this User Manual
- Heading 2 - Setting Up Your Phone
- Heading 2 - TTY Mode
- Heading 2 - Turning Your Phone On
- Heading 2 - Voicemail
- Heading 2 - Your Samsung Account
- Heading 2 - Your Google™ Account
- Heading 2 - Roaming
- Heading 2 - Securing Your Phone
- Heading 2 - System Tutorial
- Heading 2 - Turning Your Phone Off
- Heading 2 - Removing the Battery
- Heading 2 - Memory Card
- Section 2: Understanding Your Phone
- Heading 2 - Features
- Heading 2 - Front View
- Heading 2 - Side Views
- Heading 2 - Back View
- Heading 2 - Touch Screen Display
- Heading 2 - Navigation
- Heading 2 - Notification Panel
- Heading 2 - Home Screen
- Section 3: Call Functions
- Heading 2 - Making Calls
- Heading 2 - Keypad options
- Heading 2 - Answering Calls
- Heading 2 - Ending a Call
- Heading 2 - Call Log
- Heading 2 - Voicemail
- Heading 2 - Call settings
- Section 4: Entering Text
- Section 5: Accounts and Contacts
- Heading 2 - Accounts
- Heading 2 - Contacts
- Heading 2 - Favorites
- Heading 2 - My Contact Record
- Heading 2 - Groups
- Heading 2 - Speed Dials
- Section 6: Messaging
- Section 7: Connections
- Section 8: Applications and Widgets
- Heading 2 - Accessing Applications
- Heading 3 - Customizing the Apps Screens
- Heading 3 - AllShare Play
- Heading 3 - Calculator
- Heading 3 - Calendar
- Heading 3 - Camera
- Heading 3 - ChatON
- Heading 3 - Chrome
- Heading 3 - Clock
- Heading 3 - Contacts
- Heading 3 - Downloads
- Heading 3 - Email
- Heading 3 - Flipboard
- Heading 3 - Gallery
- Heading 3 - Gmail
- Heading 3 - Google
- Heading 3 - Google Settings
- Heading 3 - Google+
- Heading 3 - Local
- Heading 3 - Maps
- Heading 3 - Media Hub
- Heading 3 - Memo
- Heading 3 - Messaging
- Heading 3 - Messenger
- Heading 3 - Music Player
- Heading 3 - My Files
- Heading 3 - Navigation
- Heading 3 - Phone
- Heading 3 - Play Books
- Heading 3 - Play Magazines
- Heading 3 - Play Movies & TV
- Heading 3 - Play Music
- Heading 3 - Play Store
- Heading 3 - S Voice
- Heading 3 - Samsung Apps
- Heading 3 - Settings
- Heading 3 - Talk
- Heading 3 - Video Player
- Heading 3 - Voice Recorder
- Heading 3 - VPN Client
- Heading 3 - Wallet
- Heading 3 - YouTube
- Heading 2 - Accessing Widgets
- Heading 2 - Accessing Applications
- Section 9: Settings
- Heading 2 - Accessing Settings
- Heading 2 - Wireless and network
- Heading 2 - Device
- Heading 2 - Personal
- Heading 2 - Accounts
- Heading 2 - System
- Section 10: Health and Safety Information
- Heading 2 - Exposure to Radio Frequency (RF) Signals
- Heading 3 - Do cell phones pose a health hazard?
- Heading 4 - Research Results to Date: Is there a connection between RF and certain health problems?
- Heading 4 - Interphone Study
- Heading 4 - International Cohort Study on Mobile Phone Users (COSMOS)
- Heading 4 - Risk of Brain Cancer from Exposure to Radio Frequency Fields in Childhood and Adolescence (MOBI-KIDS)
- Heading 4 - Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program of the National Cancer Institute
- Heading 4 - Cell Phone Industry Actions
- Heading 3 - Reducing Exposure: Hands-Free Kits and Other Accessories
- Heading 3 - Children and Cell Phones
- Heading 3 - Do cell phones pose a health hazard?
- Heading 2 - Specific Absorption Rate (SAR) Certification Information
- Heading 2 - FCC Part 15 Information to User
- Heading 2 - Commercial Mobile Alerting System (CMAS)
- Heading 2 - Smart Practices While Driving
- Heading 2 - Battery Use and Safety
- Heading 2 - Samsung Mobile Products and Recycling
- Heading 2 - UL Certified Travel Charger
- Heading 2 - Display / Touch-Screen
- Heading 2 - GPS
- Heading 2 - Emergency Calls
- Heading 2 - Care and Maintenance
- Heading 2 - Responsible Listening
- Heading 2 - Operating Environment
- Heading 2 - FCC Hearing Aid Compatibility (HAC) Regulations for Wireless Devices
- Heading 2 - Restricting Children's Access to Your Mobile Device
- Heading 2 - FCC Notice and Cautions
- Heading 2 - Other Important Safety Information
- Heading 2 - Exposure to Radio Frequency (RF) Signals
- Section 11: Warranty Information
- Index
Health and Safety Information 183
The biological effects of radio frequency energy should not
be confused with the effects from other types of
electromagnetic energy.
Very high levels of electromagnetic energy, such as is found
in X-rays and gamma rays, can ionize biological tissues.
Ionization is a process where electrons are stripped away
from their normal locations in atoms and molecules. It can
permanently damage biological tissues including DNA, the
genetic material.
The energy levels associated with radio frequency energy,
including both radio waves and microwaves, are not great
enough to cause ionization of atoms and molecules.
Therefore, RF energy is a type of non-ionizing radiation.
Other types of non-ionizing radiation include visible light,
infrared radiation (heat), and other forms of electromagnetic
radiation with relatively low frequencies.
While RF energy does not ionize particles, large amounts can
increase body temperatures and cause tissue damage. Two
areas of the body, the eyes and the testes, are particularly
vulnerable to RF heating because there is relatively little
blood flow in them to carry away excess heat.
Research Results to Date: Is there a connection
between RF and certain health problems?
The results of most studies conducted to date say no. In
addition, attempts to replicate and confirm the few studies
that have shown a connection have failed.
The scientific community at large therefore believes that the
weight of scientific evidence does not show an association
between exposure to Radio Frequency (RF) from cell phones
and adverse health outcomes. Still the scientific community
has supported additional research to address gaps in
knowledge. Some of these studies are described below.
Interphone Study
Interphone is a large international study designed to
determine whether cell phones increase the risk of head and
neck cancer. A report published in the International Journal
of Epidemiology (June, 2010) compared cell phone usage for
more than 5,000 people with brain tumors (glioma and
meningioma) and a similar number of healthy controls.
Results of this study did NOT show that cell phones caused
brain cancer. In this study, most people had no increased risk
of brain cancer from using cell phones. For people with the
heaviest use of cell phones (an average of more than ½ hour
per day, every day, for over 10 years) the study suggested a
DRAFT
FOR INTERNAL USE ONLY