User's Guide
Table Of Contents
- Before Using Your Phone
- Getting to Know Your Phone
- Making and Receiving Calls
- Phone Book
- Customizing Your Phone
- Voice Mail, Pages, and Text Messages
- Advanced Features
- Battery Care and Maintenance
- Performance, Maintenance, and Safety
- Accessories
Preliminary Draft DO NOT COPY 27
Making and Receiving Calls
Once you know how to navigate display screens, make selections
using Smart keys, and use menus (all covered in “Getting to Know
Your Phone” on page 14), you are ready to do some basic tasks on
your phone, such as making and receiving calls.
In this section, you’ll learn the following:
■ Know what kind of phone you have (page 27)
■ Understand your PIN page 28
■ Make calls (page 28)
■ Receive calls (page 33)
■ End calls (page 33)
■ Change security during calls (page 34)
Before making calls
Before making calls, know what kind of phone you have (how it
was configured) and what your PIN is.
Know what kind of phone you have
How you make and receive phone calls on your phone depends
on whether you are making a clear or secure call and how your
Terminal Administrator configured your phone:
■ Traditional: Lets you make and receive both clear and secure
calls; however, the default (main operation mode) is set for
clear calls. In other words, you’ll primarily use your phone
like a commercial phone until you want to make a secure call.
To do so, you’ll hold the Send/Talk key a bit longer. Most
phones are configured as Traditional.
■ Autosecure: Lets you make and receive both clear and secure
calls but its default (main mode) is for secure calls. Autosecure
is the opposite of Traditional. While using an Autosecure
phone, you’ll generally make secure calls; to make a clear call,
you press and hold the Send/Talk key .
■ Secure-only: Only makes and receives secure calls and clear
emergency calls.