User manual
Table Of Contents
- DECLARATION OF CONFORMITY
- Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Use and Care
- 1. Setting Up Service
- 2. Phone Basics
- 3. Making and Answering Calls
- Types of Calls
- Phone Calls
- Making Calls
- Answering Calls
- Missed Phone Calls
- Emergency Calls
- In-Call Options
- End-of-Call Options
- Saving a Phone Number
- Finding a Number
- Phone Numbers With Pauses
- Making a Call From Contacts
- Making a Call From Recent Calls
- Making a Phone Call Using a Voice Name
- Making a Phone Call While in a Direct Connect Call
- Pressing ` while in an active Direct Connect lets you initiate a phone call to the other person if their mobile phone number is stored in Contacts.
- Speed Dialing
- Redialing the Last Number
- Nextel Direct Connect
- Group Connect
- Nextel Direct Send
- Talkgroups
- Call Alerts
- Direct Talk
- 4. Service Features: The Basics
- 5. Data Services
- 6. Settings
- 7. Recent Calls
- 8. Contacts
- 9. Tools
- 10. microSD Card
- 11. Camera
- 12. Bluetooth
- 13. Multimedia
- Safety and Warranty Information
- S1. Important Safety Information
- General Precautions
- Maintaining Safe Use of and Access to Your Phone
- Battery Use and Safety
- Using Your Phone With a Hearing Aid Device
- Caring for the Environment by Recycling
- Export Law Assurances
- California Perchlorate Label
- Radio Frequency (RF) Energy
- Owner’s Record
- Patent and Trademark Information
- Software Copyright Notice
- Privacy and Data Security
- Smart Practices While Driving
- S2. Manufacturer’s Warranty
- Index
166 S1. Important Safety Information
human exposure to RF signals. More than 120 scientists, engineers
and physicians from universities, government health agencies and
industries developed this updated standard after reviewing the
available body of research. In 1993, the Federal Communications
Commission (FCC) adopted this updated standard in a regulation.
In August 1996, the FCC adopted hybrid standard consisting of the
existing ANSI/IEEE standard and the guidelines published by the
National Council of Radiation Protection and Measurements
(NCRP).
Body-Worn Operation
To maintain compliance with FCC RF exposure guidelines, if
you wear a handset on your body, use the Motorola supplied or
approved carrying case, holster or other body-worn accessory.
If you do not use a body-worn accessory, ensure the antenna is
at least 2.5 centimeters from your body when transmitting. Use
of non-Motorola-approved accessories may violate FCC RF
exposure guidelines.
Your Motorola phone is designed to comply with local
regulatory requirements in your country concerning exposure
of human beings to RF energy.
For more information about RF exposure, visit the FCC website
at
www.fcc.gov.
Portable Radio Product Operation and EME Exposure
䢇 Your Motorola radio product is designed to comply with the
following national and international standards and guidelines
regarding exposure of human beings to radio frequency
electromagnetic energy (EME):
䢇 United States Federal Communications Commission, Code
of Federal Regulations; 47 CFR part 2 sub-part J.
䢇 American National Standards Institute (ANSI) / Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). C95. 1-1992.
䢇 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). C95.
1-2005 Edition.
1
䢇 International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation
Protection (ICNIRP) 1998.
䢇 Ministry of Health (Canada). Safety Code 6. Limits of Human
Exposure to Radio frequency Electromagnetic Fields in the
Frequency Range from 3 kHz to 300 GHz, 1999.
䢇 Australian Communications Authority Radio
communications (Electromagnetic Radiation - Human
Exposure) Standard 2003.
䢇 ANATEL, Brazil Regulatory Authority, Resolution 303 (July 2,
2002) “Regulation of the limitation of exposure to electrical,
magnetic, and electromagnetic fields in the radio frequency
range between 9 kHz and 300 GHz.” “Attachment to
Resolution 303 from July 2, 2002.”
1.The information provided in this document supersedes the
general safety information in user’s guides published prior to
May 1, 2006.