User's Manual
Table Of Contents
- Contents
- Menus
- Description
- Navigation principles
- Idle screen
- Activating your phone
- Contacts
- Messaging
- Camera
- My Files
- Web
- Entertainment
- Organiser & Tools
- Settings
- Technical features
- Certification and safety information for the United States and countries using FCC standards
- Declaration of Conformity
- For customers in the United States
- For customers outside the United States
- End User Licence Agreement (EULA), for the software
- Java™
- Troubleshooting
- Index
Java™ 79
- Per use: Each time MIDlet tries to use protected feature, user is prompted to grant
access.
- Per session: First time a MIDlet uses a protected function, user is prompted to grant
access like in "Per use" authorization but access is granted until the MIDlet
terminates.
- Single confirmation: The first time in the whole MIDlet life a MIDlet uses a protected
feature, user is prompted to grant access. It remains valid until the MIDlet is
removed from the handset.
- Always: The security group unconditionally grants access to protected features.
A MIDlet has a security status which is either "uncertified", or else "certified".
An "uncertified" status means that the source of the MIDlet could not be verified by
the mobile phone at installation time. As far as the phone knows, the MIDlet could
have been written by anyone.
A "certified" status means that the MIDlet was digitally signed by a known party,
whose name is displayed by the mobile phone.
Security permissions are different for "uncertified" or "certified" MIDlets.
Security configuration menu
When a MIDlet is installed in the mobile phone, default security authorizations are
applied.
This default security configuration may be altered through the "Settings/Security"
menu of an installed MIDlet.
Once in the "Security" menu, the security status of the MIDlet is displayed.
If you do not want to enter the security menu, simply select the "Back" button. You
can proceed by selecting "
OK
" button.
The menu displayed allows you to increase or decrease the permissions currently
applied to the current MIDlet for each of the security groups.
When you set a more permissive authorization to a security group than the current
value, the mobile phone asks you to confirm your increased risk exposure.
The maximum risk exposure increase is limited by the security status.
What is Java™?
Business applications and games are easily downloadable by the end-user on a
Java™ featured handset.
Your mobile phone is a MIDP 2.0 compliant Java™ platform which implements WMA
(SMS support) and MMAPI (Multimedia support) options, providing an exciting
environment to run highly graphical, networked and intuitive MIDP applications.