User Manual
Table Of Contents
- Specifications
- Phone overview
- Using shortcuts
- Menu overview
- Quick & Easy
- 1. Getting Started
- 2. Calls and address book
- Make, receive and end calls
- Using video share
- Options during a call
- Microphone off and on
- Talking on speaker
- Putting a call on hold and returning**
- Multi-party calls**
- Searching for a number in the address book during a call
- Searching for a name or group in the address book
- Finding a name manually in the address book
- Viewing the details of the highlighted entry in the address book
- Reading a message during a call
- Writing a message during a call
- Viewing calendar during a call
- Writing a notepad during a call
- Voice recording
- Setting DTMF
- Call settings
- Settings for video share
- Checking all calls
- Speed dialing
- Using the address book
- Caller identification
- Using your headset
- Service numbers and fixed dialing
- 3. Messaging
- 4. Multimedia
- Camera
- Photo album
- Video album
- Audio album
- Music Player
- Adding music from Windows Media PlayerTM
- Playing the music
- Making playlist
- Add music to playlist
- Listening music with Bluetooth headset
- Setting as ringtone
- Deleting music
- Shopping the music
- Using music identification
- Listening the radio
- Watching the music video
- Viewing Billboard information
- Launching to community
- Launching more applications
- Music player settings
- Media player
- Other files
- Managing memory
- Playing games
- 5. Useful Features
- 6. Connectivity
- 7. Settings
- 8. Appendix
are rated have the rating on their box or a label located on the box.
The ratings are not guarantees. Results will vary depending on the user’s
hearing device and hearing loss. If your hearing device happens to be
vulnerable to interference, you may not be able to use a rated phone
successfully. Trying out the phone with your hearing device is the best way
to evaluate it for your personal needs.
• M-Ratings: Phones rated M3 or M4 meet FCC requirements and are
likely to generate less interference to hearing devices than phones that
are not labeled. M4 is the better/higher of the two ratings.
• T-Ratings: Phones rated T3 or T4 meet FCC requirements and are
likely to generate less interference to hearing devices than phones that
are not labeled. T4 is the better/higher of the two ratings.
Hearing devices may also be rated. Your hearing device manufacturer or
hearing health professional may help you find this rating. Higher ratings
mean that the hearing device is relatively immune to interference noise. The
hearing aid and wireless phone rating values are then added together. A
sum of 5 is considered acceptable for normal use. A sum of 6 is considered
for best use.
In the above example, if a hearing aid meets the M2 level rating and the
wireless phone meets the M3 level rating, the sum of the two values equal
M5. This is synonymous for T ratings. This should provide the hearing aid
user with “normal usage” while using their hearing aid with the particular
wireless phone. “Normal usage” in this context is defined as a signal quality
that is acceptable for normal operation.
The M mark is intended to be synonymous with the U mark. The T mark is
intended to be synonymous with the UT mark. The M and T marks are
recommended by the Alliance for Telecommunications Industries Solutions
(ATIS). The U and UT marks are referenced in Section 20.19 of the FCC
Rules. The HAC rating and measurement procedure are described in the
American National Standards Institute (ANSI) C63.19 standard.
To ensure that the Hearing Aid Compatibility rating for your phone is
maintained, secondary transmitters such as Bluetooth and WLAN
components must be disabled during a call. See Page XX for instructions to
disable these components.










