User's Manual
Table Of Contents
- Safety precautions
- Safety Information
- SAR (Specific Absorption Rate)
- Overview of the phone
- Getting started
- Switch on, off / PIN entry
- General instructions
- Security
- Calling
- Phonebook or Addressbook
- Phonebook
- Addressbook
- Records
- Organizer
- Message lists and profiles
- SMS
- MMS
- Voice mail/ Cell broadcast
- Surf & fun
- Profiles
- Extras
- Fast access key
- Filesystem
- Setup
- Language
- T9 input
- Background
- Logo
- Color scheme
- Screensaver
- Start anim.
- Shutdn animat
- Own greeting
- Big letters
- Illumination
- Contrast
- Ringer setting
- Silent alert
- Volume
- Melodies
- Call screening
- Key tones
- Info tones
- Any to answer
- Auto key lock
- Key tones
- Call waiting
- Hide ID
- Forwarding
- Fact. settings
- Format filesys
- Phone identity
- Auto off
- Time/date
- Time zones
- Format date
- Auto display
- Buddhist year
- GPRS
- GPRS info
- IrDA
- Bluetooth™
- Fax/data mode using a PC
- Codes
- Babysitter
- Only ‚
- Last 10 only
- This SIM only
- Barrings
- Line
- Network info
- Auto network
- Pref. network
- Band selection
- Fast search
- User group
- Car Kit
- Print via.../ Send via ....
- Text entry
- Highlighting mode
- Display symbols (selection)
- Customer Care
- Specifications
- Maintenance
- U.S. FDA
- FCC/Industry Canada Notice
- Ten Driving Safety Tips
- Intellectual Property
- Battery quality statement
- Index

U.S. FDA
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• Cooperate in providing mobile
phone users with the best possible
information on what is known
about possible effects of mobile
phone use on human health.
At the same time, FDA belongs to an
interagency working group of the
federal agencies that have responsi-
bility for different aspects of mobile
phone safety to ensure a coordinat-
ed effort at the federal level. These
agencies are:
• National Institute for Occupation-
al Safety and Health
• Environmental Protection Agency
• Federal Communications Com-
mission
• Occupational Health and Safety
Administration
• National Telecommunications and
Information Administration
The National Institutes of Health also
participates in this group.
In the absence of conclusive information
about any possible risk, what can con-
cerned individuals do?
If there is a risk from these products
— and at this point we do not know
that there is — it is probably very
small. But if people are concerned
about avoiding even potential risks,
there are simple steps they can take
to do so. For example, time is a key
factor in how much exposure a per-
son receives. Those persons who
spend long periods of time on their
hand-held mobile phones could con-
sider holding lengthy conversations
on conventional phones and reserv-
ing the hand-held models for shorter
conversations or for situations when
other types of phones are not avail-
able.
People who must conduct extended
conversations in their cars every day
could switch to a type of mobile
phone that places more distance be-
tween their bodies and the source of
the RF, since the exposure level
drops off dramatically with distance.
For example, they could switch to:
• a mobile phone in which the an-
tenna is located outside the vehi-
cle,
• a hand-held phone with a built-in
antenna connected to a different
antenna mounted on the outside
of the car or built into a separate
package, or
• a headset with a remote antenna
to a mobile phone carried at the
waist.
Where can I find additional information?
For additional information, see the
following websites:
• Federal Communications Com-
mission (FCC) RF Safety Program
(select “Information on Human Ex-
posure to RF Fields from Cellular
and PCS Radio Transmitters”):
http://www.fcc.gov/oet/rfsafety.