User guide
REGULATORY INFORMATION
265
9 Use your Treo 750 to help others in emergencies. Your Treo 750 
provides you a perfect opportunity to be a “good Samaritan” in 
your community. If you see an auto accident, crime in progress, 
or other serious emergency where lives are in danger, call 9-1-1, 
as you would want others to do for you.
10 Call roadside assistance or a special wireless non-emergency 
assistance number when necessary. Certain situations you 
encounter while driving may require attention, but are not urgent 
enough to merit a call to 9-1-1. But you can still use your Treo 750 
to lend a hand. 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.
NOTICE FOR CONSUMERS WITH HEARING 
DISABILITIES
Digital Wireless Phones to be Compatible with Hearing Aids On 
July 10, 2003, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) 
modified the exemption for wireless phones under the Hearing Aid 
Compatibility Act of 1988. This means that wireless phone 
manufacturers and service providers must make digital wireless 
phones accessible to individuals who use hearing aids.
For more information, please go to the FCC’s Consumer Alert on 
accessibility of digital wireless phones at http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/
consumerfacts/accessiblewireless.html.
Wireless telephones are hand-held phones with built-in antennas, 
often called cell, mobile, or PCS phones. These phones are popular 
with callers because they can be carried easily from place to place.
Wireless telephones are two-way radios. When you talk into a 
wireless telephone, it picks up your voice and converts the sound to 
radio frequency energy (or radio waves). The radio waves travel 
through the air until they reach a receiver at a nearby base station. 
The base station then sends your call through the telephone network 
until it reaches the person you are calling.
When you receive a call on your wireless telephone, the message 
travels through the telephone network until it reaches a base station 
close to your wireless phone. Then the base station sends out radio 
waves that are detected by a receiver in your telephone, where the 
signals are changed back into the sound of a voice.
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and the Food and 
Drug Administration (FDA) each regulate wireless telephones. FCC 
ensures that all wireless phones sold in the United States follow 
safety guidelines that limit radio frequency (RF) energy. FDA monitors 
the health effects of wireless telephones. Each agency has the 
authority to take action if a wireless phone produces hazardous levels 
of RF energy.
FDA derives its authority to regulate wireless telephones from the 
Radiation Control provisions of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic 
Act (originally enacted as the Radiation Control for Health and Safety 
Act of 1968). [http://www.fda.gov/cdrh/comp/eprc.html
].
FCC derives its authority to regulate wireless telephones from the 
National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA) and the 
Telecommunications Act of 1996 
http://www.fcc.gov/telecom.html
]. Updated 7/16/2003
Hands-Free Capability All CTIA Certified portable products provide 
the consumer with a toll-free number for the purchase of a 
compatible hands-free device. 1-800-881-7256
STATIC ELECTRICITY, ESD, AND YOUR PALM DEVICE
Electrostatic discharge (ESD) can cause damage to electronic devices 
if discharged into the device, so you should take steps to avoid such 
an occurrence.










