Mitsubishi ECLIPSE User Manual

English
First Steps with your
This guide describes the basic operations of the Trium dual band GSM/GPRS telephone Eclipse.
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Whilst every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the instructions contained in this guide,
Mitsubishi Electric reserves the right to make improvements and changes to the product described in this
Edition 1, 2002. © Mitsubishi Electric Telecom Europe, 2002
Ludigames S.A. © 2001 Ludigames.
The phone at a glance
LED
Indicates a call or battery charge
Antenna
Side shuttle key Alert tones Backlight
Colour graphic display
Displays telephone numbers, menus, messages, etc.
Left softkey
(programmable)
Call/SEND key
Dials displayed number or name and answers calls. Voice Recognition (long press)
Alphanumeric keys
Enter text and telephone numbers
Microphone
2
Earpiece
Infrared module
Cursor key
Navigates around the memories and menus
Send your own Vcard Voice memo Menu Phonebook
Right softkey
(programmable)
On/Off,
END key
Hold down to turn on or
off the phone. Press the
key to end a call or re-
turn to standby display
AC/DC charger,
accessories and
headset socket
SAR
THIS ECLIPSE PHONE MEETS THE EU REQUIREMENTS FOR EXPOSURE TO RADIO WAVES.
Before a phone model is available for sale to the public, compliance with the Europe­an R&TTE directive (1999/5/CE) must be shown. This directive includes as one essential requirement the protection of the health and the safety for the user and any other person. Your mobile phone is a radio transmitter and receiver. It is designed and manufac­tured not to exceed the limits for exposure to radiofrequency (RF) energy recom­mended by The Council of the European Union . These limits are part of comprehensive guidelines and establish permitted levels of RF energy for the general population. The guidelines were developed by independent scientific organisations through periodic and thorough evaluation of scientific studies. The limits include a substantial safety margin designed to assure the safety of all persons, regardless of age and health. The exposure standard for mobile phones (CENELEC standard EN 50360: 2000) em­ploys a unit of measurement known as the Specific Absorption Rate, or SAR. The SAR limit recommended by The Council of the European Union is 2.0 W/kg. Tests for SAR have been conducted using standard operating positions (with reference to CENELEC standard EN 50361: 2000) 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 base station antenna, the lower the power output. The highest SAR value for this Trium Aura, Mystral or Odyssey model when tested for compliance against the standard was 0.941 W/kg. While there may be differences be­tween the SAR levels of various phones and at various positions, they all meet the EU requirements for RF exposure.
There are a number of independent sources of information available to users includ­ing:
Royal Society of Canada: www.rsc.ca
The International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection (ICNIRP): www.icnirp.de
The US Food and Drug Administration:
www.fda.gov/cdrh/ocd/mobilphone.html The World Health Organization: www.who.int/emf
Mitsubishi Electric belongs to the MMF, an international association of radio equip­ment manufacturers. The MMF produces information such as this in accordance with its purpose of devel­oping and presenting industry positions to independent research organisations, gov­ernment and other research bodies. Mobile Manufacturers Forum Diamant Building, 80 Blvd. A. Reyers B-1030 Brussels Belgium www.mmfai.org
3
Introduction
Thank you for purchasing the Trium Eclipse dual band mobile telephone. The mo­bile telephone described in this guide is approved for use on both the GSM 900/ 1800 and GPRS networks. Services and display messages may be different depend­ant upon your operators implementation. As with all types of radio transceivers this mobile telephone emits electromagnetic waves and conforms to international regulations in so far as it is used under normal conditions and in accordance with the safety and warning messages given below and on pages 11 to 13.
General safety
It is important to follow any special regulations regarding the use of radio equip­ment, due to the possibility of radio frequency, RF, interference. Please follow the safety advice given below.
Switch off phone and remove the battery when in an aircraft. The use of mobile telephones in an aircraft may endanger the operation of the air­craft, disrupt the cellular mobile phone network and is illegal. Failure to ob­serve this instruction may lead to suspension or denial of mobile telephone services to the offender, or legal action, or both. Respect national regulations on the use of mobile telephones in vehicles. Do not use a handheld phone whilst driving. If you don't have a handsfree car kit, stop and park your vehicle safely before using your phone. Switch off phone when at any refuelling point or near inflammable material. Switch off phone in hospitals and any other place where medical equip­ment may be in use. Respect restrictions on the use of radio equipment in fuel depots, chemical plants or where blasting operations are in progress. There may be a hazard associated with the operation of phones close to in­adequately protected personal medical devices such as hearing aids and pacemakers. Consult your doctor or the manufacturers of the medical de­vice to determine if it is adequately protected. Operation of phone close to other electronic equipment may also cause in­terference if the equipment is inadequately protected. Observe any warn­ing signs and manufacturers recommendations. Avoid prolonged contact between the antenna and your skin when the phone is switched on.
This apparatus is intended for use only when supplied with power from AC/DC adaptor chargers (FZ14130060, FZ14130070, FZ14130050, FZ14130090, FZ14130080 and FZ14130100), desk top charger (FZ14150030 and FZ14150020), and vehicle kits (FZ14150050 and FZ14150140). Use of any other charger or adaptors will invalidate any approval given to this ap-
paratus and may be dangerous.
4
Table of contents
1. Using this guide ............... 6
2. Quick Start ........................ 8
Preparing the phone for
operation ........................... 8
Basic Operations ................... 8
3. Safety information ......... 11
Vehicle safety ...................... 11
Care and maintenance ........ 11
Your responsibility .............. 11
Security codes ..................... 12
Code supplied by the airtime
serviceprovider ................ 12
Code supplied by the
manufacturer ................... 12
Emergency calls ................... 13
Battery ................................ 13
Disposing of waste
packaging ......................... 13
4. Preparing the phone
foroperation .................. 14
SIM card .............................. 14
Battery ................................ 14
5. Basic operations ............. 17
Making and receiving calls .. 17
Time & Date setting ............ 18
Unanswered call, voice
mail, newSMSmessage,
Inbox and Pushindicators 19
Modify graphics themes ...... 20
Entering text ....................... 20
Messages (SMS) .................. 23
Phonebook .......................... 24
Voice dialling ...................... 26
Last dialled numbers ........... 26
Speed dialling ..................... 27
Silent and vibrate alert
modes .............................. 27
Hands free mode ................. 28
Muting ................................ 28
Volume adjustment ............. 28
Holding and retrieving
a call ................................. 29
Call waiting, swapping
and multi-party
conferencecalls ................ 29
Diverting incoming calls
(networkservice) .............. 31
Language selection ............. 32
Softkeys - programming
the softkeys ...................... 32
Melodies download ............ 32
Games ................................. 33
Voice Memo ........................ 34
WAP™ ................................. 34
GSM man machine
interface codes ................. 36
6. The menu (MMI)
system ............................. 37
Access to the menus ........... 37
Menu map .......................... 37
7. Using the headset .......... 38
Connecting the headset ...... 38
Using the headset ............... 38
Disconnecting the headset .. 38
5
Using this guide
Please take time to read this user guide. It contains a lot of useful information about your phone and the way that it operates on the network. The GSM network is now worldwide and allows you to make and receive calls to and from other countries (called roaming) as if you were in your home country. Some features included in this guide are called network features and are supplied by service providers. How­ever before you can take advantage, or even activate many of the network features offered by the networks, you must subscribe to the services you require. For a full list and explanation of network features please consult with your service provider.
Using the keys to follow the actions described in this guide
To help you quickly understand your way around this manual we have used symbols and expressions that are present on the keys and in the display itself
means left softkey. means down arrow on round cursor. means right softkey. means the SEND key. means right arrow on round cursor. means the END key. means left arrow on round cursor. means pushing side shuttle key
means up arrow on round cursor. means pushing side shuttle key
Function
Messages
Select
Press
means the softkey with the corresponding function name. For example, Internet means press the softkey under the word Internet. words seen in this format are the actual words seen in the display.
means use and on the round cursor key to scroll to the required item in the menu and validate by pressing . For example, select Phone Book means scroll to the menu item Phone Book and validate by pressing .
means press the corresponding key. Press means press the SEND key.
Understanding the Graphic Display Indicators (Icons)
The graphic display has a main area capable of displaying up to four lines of char­acters plus one row of special display indicators or icons. These icons are used to display the phone's operational condition during use.
upwards.
downwards.
The display also displays alphabet characters and numbers as well as the phones menu list and instructions. The special icons which appear in the display during operation have the following meaning:
6
SIM memory in use Phone memory in use
Roaming. Is displayed when the phone is logged on to a network different
from its home network. Short message service (SMS). Is displayed when one or many short messages have been received and have not been read. It flashes when the SMS message bank is full and cannot store new messages. The availability of this feature is network dependent. Voice mail. Is displayed when a voice mail message has been received and stored by the networks voice mail centre. The availability of this feature is network dependent. Call diverting. Indicates whether incoming calls are permanently being diverted. The availability of this feature is network dependent. Battery level indicator. Is permanently displayed to indicate the current charge level of the battery. Three levels are shown: full (three green bar), medium (two green bars), low (one green bar). It is (one red bar), when the battery is almost empty. Arrow keys. These icons are seen during menu operation to indicate that more items in the menu can be displayed if or are pressed. More than one arrow may show at any one time. Line 2. Indicates the second line is in use. The availability of this feature is network and subscription dependent.
Unanswered call. Is displayed when an incoming call is unanswered. Signal strength level. There are five levels. It indicates the strength of the
received signal. The more bars the stronger the signal. If no network is available the display remains blank.
Keypad lock. It indicates whether keypad lock is on or off. Alarm clock icon. Vibrator alert icon. Ring tone off icon. Mute icon. Tegic edit mode icon. WAP™ 'live' connection icon. WAP™ 'live' connection in security mode icon. WAP™ connection with GPRS icon. WAP™ connection with GPRS in security mode icon. Infrared port icon, indicates the infrared port is active i.e. data can be
received from or sent by the infrared port.
GPRS service icon. It indicates data packet services are available. Inbox icon, indicates new messages in inbox. Push Messages icon, indicates the reception of new push messages. Outgoing Call icon. Incoming Call icon. Active Call icon. Multiparty icon.
Using this guide
7
Quick Start
123
4
In order to become familiar with the phone straightaway follow these simple steps.
Preparing the phone for operation
Please refer to page 14.
Basic Operations
Turning on the phone
Press and hold down . The audible power tone is played. When switching on for the first time, may appear for a few seconds. This is quite normal. The standard display will appear afterwards. A switch on tone will be heard. When switching on for the first time, enter the date & time.
If the mobile is locked, Enter lock code will be displayed. Enter the 4digit phonelock code and press OK .
If your SIM is PIN protected, Enter PIN will be displayed. Enter the PIN code and press OK .
A display animation will be shown.
Standby display
This is followed by a registration tone after which the name or logo of the network and/or service provider will be displayed together with the time and date, signal and battery level indicators and the Internet and SMS softkey functions. This is the normal standby display:
Please refer to page 12 for more details on your PIN and lock codes.
also appears in the standby display if your phone is connected to a GPRS network*. If the Mode of operation value was set to Modem (see Getting more out of your Eclipse) and if the phone is attached to a GPRS network*, the standby display will be the following:
* GPRS availability is operator dependent
8
• Pressing allows you to beam “My card” through IrDA.
4
1
2
• Pressing gives access to Voice memo listening (short press) or recording (long press).
• Pressing gives access to the main menu.
• Pressing gives access to the Phone book.
Please refer to Getting more out of your Eclipse for more information.
Keypad lock
When activated (turned on) keypad lock prevents accidental calls or actions being made by user when the phone is carried in a pocket, briefcase or handbag. When on keypad lock does not prevent calls being received, which are answered in the normal way. On completion of a received call keypad lock is automatically reactivated.
To turn keypad lock on:
Press and hold down . will be displayed.
To turn keypad lock off:
Press Unlock and press .
When the keypad is locked the backlight may be switched on by pressing the side shuttle key downwards.
Alert tones
Pressing gives access to the Alert tones control (Ring, Silent, Vibrate, Vibrate & ring, Vibrate then ring).
Internet
Pressing Internet in the standby display allows you access to the inter­net main menu from which you can dial the home page offered by your network operator, or any WAP™ portal. Up to 10 WAP™ profiles and 20bookmarks can be user configured.
Messages (SMS)
Pressing SMS in the standby display allows you access to the Internet main menu. Please refer to page 19 for more information.
Making a call
Enter the desired telephone number using the numerical keys (
- and ). A maximum of 47 digits can be entered. Correct any mistakes by pressing Clear . Holding down this key will clear the whole display. To dial (send) the number press .
Press and hold to record the phone conversation. Please refer
to page 34 for more information. When the call is connected the conversation will be heard in the earpiece and a call timer will be displayed.
Quick Start
9
Receiving a call
444
When a call is received, the phone will ring. The LED on the top of the phone will flash green and the flashing will be shown. The backlight will also come on if the phone was set to do so or if in silent mode.
To accept (answer) the call:
Press .
If the ring tone volume is set to zero (off) or if the phone has been set to 'Vibrate' mode, no audi­ble sound will be heard.
To reject, or return the busy signal to the caller:
Press .
Ending a call
Press .
Waiting a few seconds or pressing the Exit softkey will return to the standby display.
Turning off the phone
Press and hold down .
A switch off tone will sound to confirm your action. During switch off a display animation will be shown. The mobile will then turn off.
Do not turn off the phone by removing the battery as data which may need to be saved in the SIM will be lost. Should this happen, the display may show a first-aid kit symbol for a few seconds at the next power on. This is quite normal. The standard display will show afterwards.
10
Safety information
Vehicle safety
• Respect national regulations on the use of mobile telephones in vehicles.
• Road safety always comes first! Always give your full attention to driving.
• If equipped with a correctly installed vehicle kit allowing "hands free" operation and you need to make or receive a call, ensure that it is done sensibly and safely. Use pre-programmed numbers where possible and keep calls short and routine.
• If incorrectly installed in a vehicle the operation of mobile telephones could interfere with the correct operation of the vehicle electronics, such as ABS anti­lock brakes or air bags. To avoid such problems ensure that only qualified personnel carry out the installation. Verification of the protection and operation of the vehicle electronics should form part of the installation. If in doubt consult with the manufacturer.
• Do not place the phone on the passenger seat or where it could break loose during sudden breaking or a collision. Always use the holder.
• The use of an alert device to operate a vehicle's lights or horn on public roads is not permitted.
Care and maintenance
This mobile telephone is the product of advanced engineering, design and crafts­manship and should be treated with care. The suggestions below will help you to enjoy this product for many years.
• Do not expose the phone to any extreme environment where the temperature or humidity is high.
• Do not attempt to disassemble the phone. There are no user serviceable parts inside.
• Do not expose the phone to water, rain or spilt beverages. It is not waterproof.
• Do not abuse this phone by dropping, knocking or violent shaking.
• Do not clean the phone with strong chemicals or solvents. Wipe it only with a soft, slightly dampened cloth.
• Do not place the telephone alongside computer discs, credit or travel cards or other magnetic media. The information contained on discs or cards may be affected by the phone.
Your responsibility
This GSM mobile telephone is under your responsibility. Please treat it with care re­specting all local regulations. It is not a toy therefore keep it in a safe place at all times and out of the reach of children. Try to remember the phonelock and PIN codes associated with the use of this phone. Become familiar with and use the security features to block unauthorised use if your phone and/or SIM card are lost or stolen. Call your service provider immedi­ately to prevent illegal use.
Safety information
11
When not in use lock, turn off the phone and remove the battery.
Security codes
The phone and SIM card are delivered to you pre-programmed with codes that pro­tect the phone and SIM card against unauthorised use. When requested to enter any of the codes, key in the number (appears as * asterisks in the display) and press OK . Keying mistakes can be erased by pressing Clear . If you enter the wrong code an appropriate message will be displayed. Codes supplied with the SIM card are:
PIN and PIN2 codes (4-8 digits)
The PIN (Personal Identity Number) is supplied with all SIM cards and pro­tects the card against unauthorised use.
The PIN2 code, supplied with some SIM cards, is required to gain access to some features in the phone (such as fixed dialling numbers) for which an­other level of security is required.
If Enter PIN appears in the display, enter the code and press OK . Entering the wrong PIN code three times in succession will disable the SIM
card and the message SIM Blocked. Enter PUK will appear in the display. To unblock the SIM you will need the PUK (PIN Unblock Key) code, obtain­able only from your service provider.
PUK and PUK2 codes (8 digits)
The PUK code is supplied with the SIM card and is used to unblock a disa­bled SIM card.
When requested enter the PUK code and press OK . You will be request­ed to reset the PIN code. Follow the instruction in the display.
The PUK2 code is required to unblock the PIN2 code.
Code supplied by the airtime serviceprovider
Call barring password (4 digits)
This password is used to bar various types of calls, made or received, from the phone. Refer to Getting More out of your Eclipse for more details.
Voice mail password
This password protects you against unauthorised access to your voice mail.
Code supplied by the manufacturer
Phonelock code (4 digits)
This code is set to all zeros on delivery and is user re-settable. Once changed it cannot be identified by the manufacturer over the phone. Refer to Getting More out of your Eclipse for more details.
It is strongly recommended that you remember and make your­self familiar with the purpose and operation of these codes.
12
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