User Manual
Table Of Contents
- Nokia 8890 User Guide
- Contents
- For Your Safety
- 1. Welcome
- 2. Before You Begin
- 3. About Your Phone
- 4. How to make and answer calls
- 5. The menu
- 6. Entering letters and numbers
- 7. Phone book
- 8. Voice Mail
- 9. Profiles
- 10. Advanced calling features
- 11. Customizing your phone
- 12. Security features
- 13. How to select a system
- 14. Text messages
- 15. Your Personal Digital Assistant
- 16. Your phone and other devices
- 17. Fun and games
- 18. Reference Information
- 19. Techical information
- 20. Troubleshooting
- 21. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
- Nokia One-Year Limited Warranty
[ 112 ] 8890 User Guide v8 11/30/99
Vehicles
Only qualified personnel should service the phone or install the phone in
a vehicle. Faulty installation or service could be dangerous and might
invalidate any warranty that could apply to the unit.
Regularly check that all wireless phone equipment in your vehicle is
mounted and operating properly.
Do not store or carry flammable liquids, gases or explosive materials in the
same compartment as the phone, its parts, or accessories.
For vehicles equipped with an air bag, remember that an air bag inflates
with great force. Do not place objects, including both the installed or the
portable wireless equipment, in the area over the air bag or in the air bag
deployment area. If the in-vehicle wireless equipment is improperly
installed and the air bag inflates, serious injury could result.
Switch off your phone before boarding an aircraft. The use of wireless
telephones in an aircraft may be dangerous to the operation of the
aircraft, disrupt the wireless telephone network and may be illegal.
Failure to observe these instructions could lead to the suspension or the
denial of telephone services to the offender, or it could result in legal
action, or both scenarios could apply.
• Emergency Calls
IMPORTANT!
This phone, like any wireless phone, operates using radio signals,
wireless and landline networks, and user-programmed functions.
Because of this, connections in all conditions cannot be guaranteed.
Therefore, you should never rely solely on any wireless phone for essential
communications (e.g. medical emergencies).
8890ug.book Page 112 Tuesday, November 30, 1999 3:39 PM










