User's Manual
Table Of Contents
- Introduction
- Contents
- Your Phone
- Getting Started
- Navigating Functions
- Voice Call Functions
- Entering Characters
- Using the Menu
- Contacts List
- Changing the Name Order
- Changing the List Displayed
- Selecting the Storage Memory
- Sorting the Contacts List Entries
- Saving an Unregistered Number
- Add New Contact
- Viewing My Contact Details
- Copying Contacts List Entries between SIM Card and Handset
- Finding a Name
- Dialling from the Contacts List
- Editing Contacts List Entries
- Assigning a Ringtone or a Ring Video Clip to Each Entry
- Deleting Contacts List Entries
- Manage Category
- Contact Groups
- Memory Status
- Speed Dial List
- Sending a Contacts List Entry
- Receiving a Contacts List Entry
- Sending a Voice Clip Message or Video Clip Message Using an Address from the Contacts List
- Synchronising Contacts List Entries with those on the Internet
- Dialling a Service Phone Number
- Camera
- Messaging
- Vodafone live!
- Music
- My Items
- Entertainment
- Calendar
- Organiser & Tools
- SIM Application
- Settings
- Call Log
- Connecting GX40 to Your PC
- Troubleshooting
- Safety Precautions and Conditions of Use
- Index
- List of Menu Functions
152 Safety Precautions and Conditions of Use
2. In other Countries outside the EU
If you wish to discard of this product, please contact
your local authorities and ask for the correct method of
disposal.
PRECAUTIONS FOR USE IN USA
Changes or modifications not expressly approved by
the manufacturer responsible for compliance could
void the user’s authority to operate the equipment.
Exposure to Radio Waves
THIS MODEL PHONE MEETS THE
GOVERNMENT’S REQUIREMENTS FOR
EXPOSURE TO RADIO WAVES.
Your wireless phone is a radio transmitter and receiver.
It is designed and manufactured not to exceed the
emission limits for exposure to radio frequency (RF)
energy set by the Federal Communications
Commission of the U.S. Government. These limits are
part of comprehensive guidelines and establish
permitted levels of RF energy for the general
population. The guidelines are based on standards that
were developed by independent scientific organizations
through periodic and thorough evaluation of scientific
studies. The standards include a substantial safety
margin designed to assure the safety of all persons,
regardless of age and health.
The exposure standard for wireless mobile phones
employs a unit of measurement known as the Specific
Absorption Rate, or SAR. The SAR limit set by the
FCC is 1.6 W/kg.* Tests for SAR are conducted using
standard operating positions specified by the FCC with
the phone transmitting at its highest certified power
level in all tested frequency bands. Although the SAR
is determined at the highest certified power level, the
actual SAR level of the phone while operating can be
well below the maximum value. This is because the
phone is designed to operate at multiple power levels so
as to use only the power required to reach the network.
In general, the closer you are to a wireless base station
antenna, the lower the power output.
Before a phone model is available for sale to the public,
it must be tested and certified to the FCC that it does not
exceed the limit established by the government-adopted
requirement for safe exposure. The tests are performed
in positions and locations (e.g., at the ear and worn on
the body) as required by the FCC for each model. The
highest SAR value for this model phone when tested for
use at the ear is 0.675 W/kg and when worn on the body,
as described in this user guide, is 0.683 W/kg.
Body-worn Operation; This device was tested for
typical body-worn operations with the back of the
phone kept 1.5 cm from the body. To maintain
compliance with FCC RF exposure requirements, use