User's Manual
Table Of Contents
- Discover your phone
- How to...
- Softkeys
- Main menu
- Hot keys
- Shortcuts
- Table of contents
- 1 Getting Started
- Inserting the SIM card
- Charging the battery
- Setting clock
- Inserting an micro-SD card (memory card)
- 2 Text entry
- Selecting text entry methods
- Entering text
- T9® input
- Multi-tap input (ABC/Abc/abc)
- Stroke input
- 3 Calling
- Making a call
- From the idle screen
- Use the phonebook (see "Contacts" on page 27)
- Speed dial
- Answering and ending a call
- Options during a call
- Sound recorder
- Mute or unmute a call
- Adjust the earpiece volume
- Handling multiple calls (Network- dependent)
- Make a second call
- Answer a second call
- Making an emergency call
- 4 Messaging
- Creating messages
- SMS
- MMS
- Use templates for messages
- Organizing your messages
- Defining your message settings
- Set up E-mail accounts
- Write E-mail
- Send and receive E-mail
- Organize your E-mail
- Broadcast messages
- Defining settings for broadcast messages
- 5 Contacts
- Adding or editing contacts
- Add a contact to Smart Phonebook
- Add a contact to SIM phonebook
- Edit a contact
- Searching for a contact
- Managing your contacts
- Copy or move a certain contact
- Copy all contacts
- Delete all contacts
- Group your contacts
- Special numbers
- 6 Business
- Using your business organizer
- Create your to-do list
- Check your calendar
- Using your business assistant
- Alarm
- Business card reader
- Text reader
- Sound recorder
- Change clock display
- Others
- 7 Browser
- Managing your browser
- Accessing web sites
- 8 Camera
- Using the camera
- Using the video recorder
- 9 Fun
- Getting fun from Java applications
- Java applications
- Listening to the FM radio
- Tune to a radio station
- Edit the channel list
- Listen to a radio station
- Editing your photos
- Add to or clip from photos
- Piecing photos together
- Editing your ringtones
- STK
- 10 Music
- Creating your music library
- Edit music files on your PC
- Transfer music files from PC to your phone
- Playing music
- Play music files
- Create playlists
- 11 My files
- Finding your files
- Managing your files
- Create sub-folders
- Manage your files
- Sharing your files
- Using photos
- Edit a photo
- Set a photo as wallpaper
- Set a photo as screensaver
- Print a photo
- Setting audio files as ringtone
- 12 Calls
- 13 Bluetooth
- About Bluetooth
- Connecting to a Bluetooth device
- Getting connected by a Bluetooth device
- 14 Profiles
- Adjusting ring settings to different scenes
- Define your profiles
- Apply a profile
- 15 Settings
- General
- Display
- Network settings
- Security
- Icons & Symbols
- Precautions
- Troubleshooting
- Philips Authentic Accessories
- Trademark Declaration
- Limited Warranty
- Declaration of Conformity
Specific Absorption Rate Information 70
Specific Absorption Rate Information
International standards
THIS MOBILE PHONE MEETS THE INTERNATIONAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR EXPOSURE
TO RADIO WAVES
Your mobile phone is a radio transmitter and receiver. It is designed and manufactured not to exceed
the limits for exposure to radio frequency (RF) energy defined by the international standards. These
recommendations have been established by the International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation
Protection (ICNIRP) and, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) that forecast a
substantial safety margin for assuring the protection of all persons, regardless of age and health.
The exposure recommendations for mobile phones use a measurement unit known as the Specific
Absorption Rate (SAR). The SAR limit recommended by the ICNIRP for the mobile phones used by
the general public is 2.0W/kg averaged over ten grams of tissue and, is 1,6W/kg averaged
over one gram of tissue by IEEE Std 1528 for the head.
Tests for SAR have been conducted using recommended operating positions with the mobile 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 levels of the mobile phone while
operating are generally below the maximum SAR value. This is because the phone is designed to










