Cell Phone User's Guide
Table Of Contents
- check it out
- use and care
- essentials
- main attractions
- basics
- calls
- customize
- other features
- Legal and Safety
- Safety and General Information
- Operational Precautions
- RF Energy Interference/Compatibility
- Bluetooth
- Caring for the Environment by Recycling
- Driving Precautions
- Operational Warnings
- Service and Repairs
- Export Law Assurances
- Battery Use and Safety
- Battery Charging
- Specific Absorption Rate
- AGPS and Emergency Calls
- Motorola Limited Warranty for the United States and Canada
- Hearing Aid Compatibility With Mobile Phones
- Information From the World Health Organization
- Product Registration
- Wireless: The New Recyclable
- California Perchlorate Label
- Patent and Trademark Information
- Software Copyright Notice
- Privacy and Data Security
- Smart Practices While Driving
- index
88
Legal and Safety
• Get to know your Motorola mobile device and its
features such as speed dial and redial.
If available,
these features help you to place your call without taking
your attention off the road.
• When available, use a handsfree
device.
If possible, add an additional
layer of convenience to your phone with
one of the many Motorola Original
handsfree accessories available today.
• Position your mobile device within easy reach.
Be
able to access your phone without removing your eyes
from the road. If you receive an incoming call at an
inconvenient time, if possible, let your voice mail answer
it for you.
• Let the person you are speaking with know you are
driving; if necessary, suspend the call in heavy
traffic or hazardous weather conditions.
Rain, sleet,
snow, ice, and even heavy traffic can be hazardous.
• Do not take notes or look up phone numbers while
driving.
Jotting down a “to do” list or going through your
address book takes attention away from your primary
responsibility, driving safely.
• Dial sensibly and assess the traffic; if possible,
place calls when your car is not moving or before
pulling into traffic.
If you must make a call while
moving, dial only a few numbers, check the road and your
mirrors, then continue.
• Do not engage in stressful or emotional
conversations that may be distracting.
Make people
you are talking with aware you are driving and suspend
conversations that can divert your attention away from the
road.
• Use your mobile device to call for help.
Dial 911 or
other local emergency number in the case of fire, traffic
accident, or medical emergencies (wherever wireless
phone service is available).
• Use your mobile device to help others in
emergencies.
If you see an auto accident, crime in
progress, or other serious emergency where lives are in
danger, call 911 or other local emergency number
(wherever wireless phone service is available), as you
would want others to do for you.
• Call roadside assistance or a special
non-emergency wireless assistance number when
necessary.
If you see a broken-down vehicle posing no
serious hazard, a broken traffic signal, a minor traffic
accident where no one appears injured, or a vehicle you
know to be stolen, call roadside assistance or other
special non-emergency wireless number (wherever
wireless phone service is available).










