User manual
Table Of Contents
- Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Getting Started
- Safety and Care
- Using NOOK Gestures
- Navigation Buttons
- The Status Bar
- GlowLight
- Home Screen
- Reading Books on Your NOOK
- Reading Magazines and Newspapers on Your NOOK
- The Library on Your NOOK
- Shopping on Your NOOK
- Using B&N Readouts™
- Using Your NOOK in a Barnes & Noble Store
- Searching Your NOOK
- NOOK Settings
- Account Screen
- Using Your NOOK at Wi-Fi Hotspots
- Updating the Software on Your NOOK
- Tips and Troubleshooting
- Appendix A: Page Numbering and File Formats
- Appendix B: International Use and Languages
- Appendix C: One-Year Limited Warranty
- Appendix D: Trademarks
- Appendix E: FCC Notices
- Appendix F: Industry Canada Notice
- Appendix G: Terms of Service
- Appendix H: AT&T Terms of Service & Acceptable Use Policy
- Appendix I: Natural Resources Canada
- Appendix J: Intertek Safety Certification
Exploited Children. For more information about online safety, visit
www.ncmec.org or
www.att.com/safety.
Spam/E-mail/Usenet Abuse
Violation of the CAN-SPAM Act of 2003, or any state or federal law
regulating e-mail services, constitutes an automatic violation of this AUP
and AT&T reserves the right to seek damages and other available relief
against Customer, as applicable.
Spam/E-mail/Usenet Abuse is prohibited on AT&T IP Services. Examples
of Spam/E-mail/Usenet Abuse include but are not limited to the following
activities:
Sending unsolicited electronic mail messages and “mail-bombing” (sending
mass unsolicited e-mail messages to a single user, or group of users,
commercial or otherwise, or deliberately sending very large attachments to
one recipient) using IP Service(s) are prohibited.
Using another site’s mail server to relay mail without the express
permission of the site; using another computer, without authorization, to
send multiple e-mail messages or to retransmit e-mail messages for the
purpose of misleading recipients as to the origin; using IP addresses that the
Customer does not have a right to use; collecting the responses from
unsolicited electronic messages; maintaining a site that is advertised via
unsolicited electronic messages, regardless of the origin of the unsolicited
electronic messages; spamming, or sending unsolicited commercial e-mail,
sending unsolicited electronic messages with petitions for signatures, or any
chain mail related materials, or requests for charitable donations; sending
messages that are harassing or malicious, or otherwise could reasonably be
predicted to interfere with another party’s quiet enjoyment of the AT&T IP
Services or the Internet (e.g., through language, frequency, size or
otherwise); sending bulk (i.e., twenty-five or more recipients) electronic
messages without identifying, within the message, a reasonable means of
opting out from receiving additional messages from the sender; using
distribution lists containing addresses that include those who have opted










