Cell Phone User's Guide
Table Of Contents
- Contents
- 1 For your safety
- 2 Welcome
- 3 Before you begin
- 4 About your phone
- 5 Make and answer calls
- 6 The menu
- 7 Enter letters and numbers
- 8 Use the phone book
- 9 Check call history
- 10 Advanced calling features
- 11 Use voice features
- 12 Personalize your phone
- 13 Manage phone security
- 14 Select a system
- 15 Communicate with text messages
- 16 Your wireless Internet browser
- 17 Your personal digital assistant
- 18 Your phone and other devices
- 19 Fun and games
- 20 Reference information
- 21 Technical information
- 22 Troubleshooting
- NOKIA One-Year Limited Warranty
- Index
16
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16 Your wireless Internet browser
Your phone has a built-in browser you can
use to connect to selected services on the
Internet. You can view weather reports,
check news or flight times, view financial
information, and much more.
• NOTES ON WIRELESS INTERNET ACCESS
This section gives a brief overview of wireless Internet technology.
Technology background
WAP
A technology called Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) is to mobile
devices what the World Wide Web (WWW) is to personal computers.
The mobile community began developing WAP several years ago to
provide access to the Internet for mobile users.
Today, most WAP sites are made up of text and hyperlinks. Some pages
even contain low-resolution graphics, or require data input. Your service
provider and others are free to design WAP sites as they choose, so the
sites are as variable as Web pages on the Internet.
Internet content on your personal computer is called a “web page.”
Internet content on your mobile phone is called a “page,” or “WAP card.”
GPRS
General Packet Radio Service (GPRS) is a technology used to send and
receive data via short bursts or packets over the wireless network. GPRS
allows you to stay connected to the Internet. This feature allows for faster
downloads of information and no time spent completing a dial-up connection.
Applications using GPRS include the WAP browser, text messaging and
dial-up connections for making digital data calls.










