Mobile Phone User's Guide
Table Of Contents
- T18Sr1a_EN-I.pdf
- Preparing Your Phone for Use
- Turning Your Phone On and Off
- Display Information andKey Functions
- Making and Receiving Calls
- During a Call
- Using the Menu System
- Your Personal PhoneBook
- Using the Call List
- Your Voice Mail Service
- Personalizing YourPhone
- Sending and Receiving Text Messages (SMS)
- Receiving a Message
- Reading a Stored Message
- Calling a phone number found in a message
- Enabling the Phone to Send SMS
- Replying to a Message
- Erasing a Message
- Storing Incoming Messages
- Enhancing Your Text Messages
- Composing a Text Message
- Sending a New Text Message
- Sending a Stored
- Sending a Stored Message
- Own messages
- Area Information
- Diverting Incoming Calls
- Security for YourPhone and Subscription
- Handling More than One Call Simultaneously
- Setting Network Preferences
- Knowing the Call Time/ Call Cost
- Using Two Voice Lines
- Calling from Your Car
- Voice Recognition
- Calling Card or Credit Card Calls
- Sending and Receiving Faxes
- Some Useful Tools
- Troubleshooting
- Quick Keys
- Technical Data
- Glossary
- Advice of Charge
- Alternate Line Service
- Area Information
- Calling Line Identification
- Call Barring
- Divert
- DTMF or Touch Tone
- Dual Band GSM 900/1800
- Enter
- Fixed Dialling Numbers
- Full Duplex
- Fax Class
- GSM 900
- GSM 1800
- International Prefix (+)
- International Roaming
- Line 1/Line 2
- Menu System
- Network
- Operator
- Phone Book
- PC-Card
- PIN
- PIN2
- PUK
- Roaming
- Semi-Duplex
- Service Provider
- Short Message Service
- Scroll
- Select
- SIM card
- SMS
- Subscription
- Guidelines for Safe andEfficient Use
- Warranty
- Index

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Guidelines for Safe and Efficient Use 97
Guidelines for Safe
and Efficient Use
Note! Read this information before using your portable phone
Since its introduction in the mid 1980s the portable phone is one of the most
exciting and innovative products ever developed. With it, you can stay in con-
tact with your office, your home, emergency services, and others.
Your telephone is a radio transmitter and receiver. When it is ON it receives
and also sends out radio frequency (RF) energy. Depending upon the type of
mobile phone you have purchased, it operates in different frequency ranges
and employs commonly used modulation techniques. When you use your
phone, the system handling your call controls the power level at which your
phone transmits.
For the safe and efficient operation of your phone, observe these guidelines.
The International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection
(ICNIRP), sponsored by the World Health Organization (WHO), published a
statement in 1996 which sets limits for exposure to RF fields from handheld
mobile phone. According to this statement, which is based on the available
body of research, there is no evidence that mobile terminals meeting the rec-
ommended limits can cause any adverse health effects. All Ericsson tele-
phones conform to the ICNIRP recommendations, and international exposure
standards, such as:
• CENELEC European Pre-standard ENV50166-2
• ANSI/IEEE C95.1-1992 (USA, Asia- Pacific)
If you want to limit RF exposure even further, you may choose to control the
duration of your calls and operate your phone in the most power efficient
manner.
GENERAL
EXPOSURE TO RADIO FREQUENCY ENERGY










