Mitsubishi Electronics Trim 110 User Manual

english
This guide describes the operation of the dual band GSM telephones
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
Edition 1, 2002. © Mitsubishi Electric Telecom Europe, 2002
described in this guide and/or to the guide itself, without prior notice.
Trium 110.
Table of contents
1. Introduction ................. 3
SAR ...................................... 3
General safety ...................... 4
Vehicle safety ....................... 4
Emergency calls ................... 5
Care and maintenance ......... 5
AC/DC adaptor chargers ...... 6
Battery use ........................... 6
Your responsibility ............... 6
Security codes ...................... 6
Disposing of waste
packaging ......................... 7
The phone at a glance ......... 8
Graphic display .................... 9
Understanding the icons ...... 9
2. Getting started .......... 10
Preparing to make your
first call ........................... 10
Making your first call ......... 10
Battery ............................... 12
SIM card ............................ 14
3. Using your phone ...... 15
Standby display ................. 15
Important icons ................. 15
Dialling from memory ........ 16
Last dialled numbers .......... 16
Speed dialling .................... 16
Silent and vibrate alert
modes ............................. 17
Hands free features ........... 17
Muting ............................... 17
Volume adjustment ........... 17
Sending DTMF tones .......... 17
Pause feature ..................... 18
Holding and retrieving a
call .................................. 18
4. The menu .................... 20
Access to the menus .......... 20
Menu map ......................... 20
Entering text ...................... 20
Network services ................ 22
Phone book ....................... 22
Messages (SMS) ................. 26
EMS .................................. 29
Calls & Times ..................... 29
Settings - customising
your phone ..................... 32
Using the office tools ........ 44
Games ............................... 46
Currency-converter ............ 47
Internet/Wireless
Application Protocol
(WAP™) ........................... 47
GSM man machine
interface codes ................ 50
5. Accessories ................. 51
Using the headset .............. 51
6. Appendix .................... 52
Glossary ............................. 52
Trouble shooting ............... 53
Error messages .................. 54
7. Declaration of
compliance ................. 58
Introduction
Thank you for purchasing the Trium 110 dual band mobile telephone. The phone version you have bought is either the Trium 110, the Trium 110 m or the Tri­um 110 p. Please check the version on the box label. The mobile telephone de­scribed in this guide is approved for use on all GSM 900/1800 networks. Some services and messages may be different according to your subscription type and/or service provider. As with all types of radio transceivers this mobile telephone emits electro­magnetic waves and conforms to inter­national regulations when it is used under normal conditions and in accord­ance with the safety and warning mes­sages given below and on page 4.
SAR
THIS TRIUM 110, TRIUM 110 m OR TRI­UM 110 p PHONE MEETS THE EU RE­QUIREMENTS FOR EXPOSURE TO RADIO WAVES. Before a mobile phone 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 Union1. These limits are part of comprehensive guidelines and establish permitted levels of RF energy for the general population. The guidelines were
1. European recommendation 1999/519/CE
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 limit2 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 bands3. 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 110, Trium 110 m or Trium 110 p model when tested for compliance against the standard was 0.746 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.
2. The SAR limit for mobile phones used by the
public is 2.0 watts/kilogram (W/kg) averaged over ten grams of tissue. The limit incorpora­tes a substantial margin of safety to give additional protection for the public and to account for any variations in measurements
3. The maximum level of GSM emitted power is
250mW at 900 MHz and 125 mW at 1800MHz according to the GSM standard.
Introduction
There are a number of independent sources of information available to us­ers including: Royal Society of Canada: www.rsc.ca The International Commission on Non­Ionizing 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
General safety
It is important to follow any special reg­ulations regarding the use of radio equipment, due to the possibility of ra­dio frequency, 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.
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.
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.
• Do not use a hand-held phone while driving. If you do not have a ‘hands free’ car kit, stop and park your vehi­cle safely before using your phone.
• 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 can interfere with the correct operation of the vehicle electronics, such as ABS anti-lock 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 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.
Emergency calls
In Europe, provided the phone has GSM service, emergency calls can be made using the European standard emergen­cy number, 112, even if you do not have a SIM in the phone. Emergency calls can even be made if the phone is PIN or electronically locked or call barred. In some countries local emer­gency numbers can still be used for emergency purposes but the phone may have to contain a valid SIM card. When making an emergency call re­member to give all the necessary infor­mation as accurately as possible. The phone may be the only means of com­munication at the scene of an emergen­cy therefore do not cut off the call until told to do so.
Mobile phones rely on wireless and landline net­works which cannot be guaranteed in all condi­tions. Therefore you should never rely solely on wireless phones for essential emergency commu­nications.
Care and maintenance
This mobile telephone is the product of advanced engineering, design and craftsmanship and should be treated with care. The suggestions below can 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 expose or store in cold tem­peratures. When the phone warms up after switch on, to its normal temper­ature, moisture can form inside which can damage the electrical parts.
• 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. Rough handling can damage it.
• 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.
• Do not connect incompatible prod­ucts. The use of third party equip­ment or accessories, not made or authorised by Mitsubishi Electric, invalidates the warranty of your phone and can be a safety risk.
• Do not remove the labels. The num­bers on it are important for aftersale service and other related purposes.
• Do contact an authorised service cen­tre in the unlikely event of a fault.
Introduction
AC/DC adaptor chargers
This apparatus is intended for use only when supplied with power from AC/DC adaptor chargers (FZ14130070, FZ14130060, FZ14130050, FZ14130080, FZ14130090 or FZ14130100). Use of any other charger or adaptors will invalidate any approval given to this apparatus and may be dangerous.
Battery use
You can charge a battery hundreds of times but gradually it wears out. When the operating time (stand-by and talk time) is noticeably shorter than normal it is time to buy a new battery.
• Do not leave batteries connected to a charger longer than necessary. Over­charging shortens battery life.
• Disconnect battery chargers from the power source when not in use.
• Do not expose batteries to high tem­peratures or humidity.
• Do not dispose of the batteries in fire. They can explode.
• Avoid putting the batteries into con­tact with metal objects which can short circuit the battery terminals (e.g. keys, paper clips, coins, chains etc.).
• Do not drop or subject the batteries to strong physical shocks.
• Do not try to disassemble any of the battery packs.
• Use only the recommended battery chargers (see page6).
• If the battery terminals become soiled, clean them with a soft cloth.
• It is normal for batteries to become warm during charging.
Battery disposal
In compliance with European environ­mental protection directives, used batteries must be returned to the place of sale, where they are collected free of charge. Don't throw away your batteries in your household waste.
Your responsibility
This GSM mobile telephone is your re­sponsibility. Please treat it with care re­specting all local regulations. It is not a toy; please keep it in a safe place at all times and out of the reach of children. 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. 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. A short de­scription of each follows. See page 36 to change your PIN and phonelock codes.
PIN and PIN2 codes (4-8 digits)
All SIM cards have a PIN (Personal Identity Number). It protects the card against unauthorised use. Some SIM cards also have a PIN2 code that protects specific features such as fixed dialling numbers. Entering the wrong PIN code three times in succession disables the SIM card and the message SIM Blocked.
Enter PUK: appears. To unblock the
SIM you need the PUK (PIN Unblock
Key) code, obtainable only from your service provider.
PUK and PUK2 codes (8 digits)
Obtain the PUK code from your service provider. Use it to unblock a disabled SIM card (see page 37). The PUK2 code is required to un­block the PIN2 code (see above).
Call barring password (4 digits)
This password is used to bar various types of calls, made or received, from the phone (see page 42).
Phonelock code (4 digits)
This code is set to all zeros on deliv­ery. You can change it. Once changed it cannot be identified by the manufacturer over the phone. Please refer to page 36 for more de-
tails. You must remember and make yourself familiar with the purpose and operation of these codes.
Disposing of waste packaging
The packaging used for this phone is made of recyclable materials and as such should be disposed of in accord­ance with your national legislation on the protection of the environment. Please take care to separate the card­board and plastic elements and to dis­pose of them in the correct manner.
Introduction
The phone at a glance
Graphic display
Programmable
Earpiece
softkeys ( )
The function of the softkey appears in the graphic display above the key.
Cursor key
Navigates around the memories and menus.
on the cursor key: press to scroll up menus (while in the menu). In stand-by, press to access the volume control.
on the cursor key. Press to scroll down menus (while in the menu). In stand-by, press to access the alert mode (ring, silent, vibrate, etc.)
on the cursor key. Press to access the main menu or select a menu option.
on the cursor key. Press to access the phone book or return to the previous display.
Call/SEND key ( ). Press to make/answer a call. In stand-by, press to display the last dialled numbers list.
Headset, accessories
and AC/DC charger
socket
Telephone
numbers, menus,
messages, etc. are
displayed here.
On/Off, END key
( ). Hold down to
turn the phone on/off.
Press to end a call or
return to stand-by.
Alphanumeric keys,
- , , .
To enter numbers,
characters and
punctuation marks.
Press and hold to
call the voice mail
number. Press and
hold to keys to
dial preferred
numbers. Press and
hold to enter
international code +
prefix, 'P' symbol or '_'
underscore wildcard. .
Press and hold to
activate the keypad
lock feature.
Battery cover
(at the back of
the phone)
See page 10
for further
details.
Microphone
Graphic display
The display shows icons, alphabet characters, num­bers, menu list and instructions to the user. Use the cursor keys to navigate to the phone book, Internet/WAP™ and the menu. The rest of this guide gives you the procedures to access these func­tions. Icons in the display are described on page9.
Understanding the icons
Icons in the display have the following meaning:
SIM memory in use
Phone memory in use.
When you enter a name and ad-
dress you can choose the icon you
want to go with them.
Roaming. Displayed when the
phone is logged on to a network
different from its home network.
Short message service (SMS). Dis-
played when you have one or
more messages to read. It flashes
when the SMS message bank is full and cannot store new messag­es. Delete one or more old mes­sages to make space. The availability of this feature is net­work dependent. This icon will also be displayed if you receive an EMS on Trium 110 m.
Unanswered call. Displayed when an incoming call is unanswered.
Arrow keys. Displayed during menu operation to indicate that more items in the menu can be displayed if or are pressed.
Voice mail. Displayed when you have a voice mail message to read. The availability of this feature is network dependent.
Battery level indicator. Perma­nently displayed to indicate the current charge level of the bat­tery. Three levels are shown. low, medium, full. It flash­es when the battery is almost empty.
Line 2. Indicates the second line is in use. The availability of this feature is network dependent.
Signal strength level. 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. Indicates whether keypad lock is on or off.
Alarm clock icon. Vibrator alert icon. Ring tone off. All tones are off. Mute icon. Predictive text mode icon. WAP™ 'live' connection icon. WAP™ 'live' connection in security
mode icon. Auto-switch function activated
icon.
Introduction
Getting started
1
In order to become familiar with the phone quickly, follow these simple steps.
Preparing to make your first call
Inserting the SIM card
Unpack the phone and insert the SIM card into the holder, as shown below, with the gold contacts fac­ing down.
Fitting the battery
Connect the battery as shown be­low.
Placing the battery cover
Place the battery cover as shown below.
Making your first call
If there is not enough charge in the battery to power the phone, follow the instructions for battery charging on page 13.
Turning on the phone
Press and hold down for two seconds. If this is the first time you use the phone or you remove and
10
replace the battery, the
2
3
1
phone prompts you for the date and time. If you insert the SIM card incorrectly, the error message
Check SIM! appears. Remove
the cover and battery and make sure the SIM is inserted with the gold contacts facing down.
If the mobile is locked, Code: appears. Enter the 4digit phonelock code and press OK . The default is 4zeros, e.g. 0000.
If your SIM is PIN protected,
Enter PIN: appears.
Enter the PIN code and press
OK . An animated screen
icon appears, then the stand­by display.
See page 35 to change your PIN and lock codes!
Stand-by display
From the stand-by display:
Press... to...
enter phone menu. directly access to numbers stored in phone books. access volume control. access alert tones. access the last dialled numbers list. stop the dialling or end a call. enter numbers in the dis-
-
play (see also "Speed dial­ling", page 16).
See page 37 to set the time and date.
Holding your phone
How to hold the phone
Avoid covering the upper back half of the phone so as to allow maxi­mum emission and reception quality.
Please be warned that you should not, when using the hands free mode, put the phone to your ear.
Making a call
The phone can make and receive calls only when it is switched on, unlocked (see page15), has a valid SIM card inserted and has GSM net­work service coverage. If the phone cannot find a valid network the dis­play remains blank.
Enter the desired telephone number using the numeric keys ( - ). You can enter a maxi­mum of 46 digits. Correct any mistakes by pressing Clear . Hold down this key or press to clear the whole display.
Getting started
11
To dial (send) the number press
2
.
The phone rings and the call con­nects like a normal telephone. A call timer appears.
You can prefix international calls with 00 or +. To enter the + symbol before a number press and hold down .
You can also get the following mes­sages if the call does not connect or you use the second line:
Your phone
displays...
Busy
Not allowed
(fixed dial-
ling)
if the...
called party is en­gaged. number dialled is not authorised by the FDN list (see page 25). call is made using the second line (see page 32).
If the dialled number matches one stored in the phone book then the name of the called person appears in the display.
Receiving a call
The phone rings (or vibrates, see page 32 to set) when it receives a call. See page 33 to set the incom­ing ring tone. See page 34 to set the backlight.
Answering the call
Press .
If the ring tone volume is set to zero (off) or if the phone has been set to 'Vibrate' mode, no sound is heard.
No ring
Pressing No ring stops the sound of the ring tone, which al­lows you to, for example, go out of a room before pressing.
Service number presentation
If you have the service number presentation your phone displays the following information.
Your phone dis-
plays...
Unknown number,
then Call1 when connected
number
unavaila­ble.
available
the caller’s number
but not in phone books.
Withheld number,
then Call1 when
withheld.
connected
If you have a second line, ap­pears when the call has been re­ceived on your line 2 number (see page 18 for details).
Rejecting the call
To reject, or return a busy signal to the caller:
Press .
Ending a call
Press . The call timer stops and
disappears.
Waiting a few seconds or pressing the Exit softkey returns the phone to the stand-by display.
The phone stores the caller's number, if available, in the received calls log (see page 29).
Turning off the phone
Press and hold down .
The mobile turns off.
Battery
Low battery warning
When the battery power falls to its lowest level the message Low Bat-
tery! appears and a low battery
if the
is...
12
warning tone sounds. If you are on a call, terminate the call and turn off the phone by pressing and holding down . Recharge the battery as shown be­low or swap it for a charged one.
Do not turn off the phone by removing the battery, data can
be lost.
Charging the battery
To ensure a long life for your bat­tery, re-charge it only when the
Low Battery! warning appears and
the 'low battery' tone is heard. Connect the charger to the phone as shown.
While inserting the plug in the phone AC/DC connector, make sure the Trium logo () appears on top.
Plug the charger into the wall sock­et and turn on the mains. The bat­tery starts to charge. The phone can be used while charging but this in­creases the charging time.
Charging indicators when the mo­bile is off: During charging Charging... ap­pears. When charging is finished, Battery full appears. It is normal for the battery to get warm during charging.
Charging indicators when the mo­bile is on: During charging the icon flashes 1-2-3 bars continuously. When charging completes the battery in­dicator shows three solid bars.
Disconnecting the charger
At the end of charging, disconnect the charger from the phone (see be­low), switch off and remove the plug from the mains.
Typical charging times using the AC/DC adaptors (FZ14130070, FZ14130060, FZ14130050, FZ14130080, FZ14130090 or FZ14130100)
Battery type
Standard battery (FZ14240010)
Typical charg-
ing time
2 hours 10 minutes
Removing the battery
Remove the battery as shown blow.
Getting started
13
SIM card
Inserting the SIM card
Please refer to page 10.
Removing the SIM card
Remove the SIM card as shown be­low.
14
Using your phone
1
2
3
For turning on/off the mobile and mak­ing/receiving calls, see pages 10 to 12. Please note that all setting instructions described in this user guide are to be followed from the idle screen.
Standby display
Keypad lock
To prevent accidental operation of the phone, turn on keypad lock. You can still answer calls by press­ing . When you end a call, the keypad lock reactivates automati­cally. To turn keypad lock on:
Press and hold down . appears.
To turn keypad lock off:
Press Unlock plus or press and hold .
You can also use the menu:
Press . Select Settings. Select Phone settings. Select
Keypad lock to turn keypad
lock on. Press Unlock plus to
turn keypad lock off or press and hold .
Internet/Wireless Application Pro­tocol (WAP™)
Press Internet in the stand-by display to access the internet main menu and access your home page or any WAP™ portal. You can con­figure up to 5WAP™ profiles and 10bookmarks. See page 47 for more information.
Messages (SMS)
Press SMS in the stand-by dis­play to access the short messages menu. You can also access it from the main menu. See page 26 for more details.
Pre-programmed softkeys can be accessed from the stand-by display. These can be for instance Internet/Wap or SMS. The softkeys may be pro­grammable according to your servce provider.
Backlight operation
The backlight is normally off. When a key is pressed the display and key­pad backlight turns on for 10 sec­onds. If an incoming call is received the backlight turns on and remains on for 10 seconds after the call is answered.
Important icons
• is displayed when you do not answer one or more calls. Press
Read to view the callers' numbers
if available and the date and time the call was received. Press to call the number. The phone stores unan­swered call numbers in the unan­swered calls log (see page 29 for details).
• appears when you receive one or several voice messages. Press Read
to view the message or press to speed dial your voice mail mes­sage centre (see pages 9 and 35 for more details).
• appears when you receive one or several SMS messages. Press Read to view the SMS inbox message. If flashes, your inbox is full. Delete one or more old messages to make space for one or more new messages (see page 26 for more details).
The display shows the number and type of messages:
Using your phone
15
Press Read to select the type of mes-
1
2
3
123
451
2
3
1
2
sage you want to read. Press Select or to view the message.
When one indicator is displayed the date is tempo­rarily cleared. When two or three indicators are displayed both the time and date are temporarily cleared.
Dialling from memory
You can dial any number stored in the SIM, or the phone memory. To do this:
from the phone book
Press to enter the phone book list.
Use or to scroll to the required name or type the first letter of the required name and use or if nec­essary.
Press .
In case of a SIM memory
contact or of a phone memory contact with one number assigned, the
phone dials the number.In case of a phone memory
contact with many num­bers assigned, use or
to scroll to the number required and press . The phone dials the number.
See page 22.
from the calls log memory list
The phone stores the last 10 num-
bers dialled, the last 10 unanswered call numbers (if available) and the last 10 received answered numbers.
Press . Select Calls & Times. Select Calls log. Select Last dial, Unan-
swered or Received.
Use or to scroll to the number required.
Press to dial the number.
See page 29.
Last dialled numbers
Quick access to the last 10 dialled num­bers can also be obtained by pressing.
In the stand-by mode press­ing displays a list of the last dialled numbers.
Use or to scroll to the number required.
Press to dial the number.
The phone stores the last dialled numbers in the phone memory, not in the SIM.
Speed dialling
You can assign any key to any tele­phone number stored in the SIM and phone memory. To dial such a number:
Press and hold down the key ( -
). The number appears and
attempts to connect.
By default, is always allocated to the voice mail number (see page38). See page 35 to allocate numbers to the speed dialling keys.
International Country Codes
Your phone allows quick access to pre-programmed International Country Codes
Press and hold the '+' key until the '+' symbol is dis­played.
Select Codes to display the list of countries.
16
Use and and select one
31212
1
21212
of the countries. The '+' sym­bol and the country code (e.g
+31 for the Netherlands) are
displayed. It is then possible to enter the phone number and store it into one of the phonebooks (Phone names / SIM names) or delete it.
Silent and vibrate alert modes
To avoid disturbing others you can si­lence the incoming ring and alert tones.
Turning on
Press . Select Silent, Vibrate or
Vibrate then Ring.
is displayed when the silent alert mode feature is activated. is displayed when the Vibrate or
Vibrate then Ring features are
activated.
Turning off
Press . Select Ring or Vibrate &
Ring.
If the ring tone volume is set to 0 a warning mes­sage appears in the display.
Hands free features
When you want to share your call with an audience, or you are in your car, use the “hands free” feature.
Turning the hands free feature on
When making a call:
Press Speak.on to turn the hands free feature on during the calling process.
When receiving a call:
Press Speak.on to accept the incoming call.
Turning the hands free feature off
Press Speak.off .
Muting
You can mute the microphone during a call, e.g. when you want to talk to someone nearby without the person on the phone hearing.
Turning the microphone off
Press Options . Select Mute and select Yes. A
warning message appears in the display. also appears.
Turning the microphone on
Press Options . Select Unmute. A warning
message appears in the dis­play. disappears.
A new call restores the microphone to on.
Volume adjustment
To adjust the volume:
Use or to increase or decrease the volume and press OK .
Press Exit or wait 2 sec­onds to return to the previous display.
See also page 33.
Sending DTMF tones
Some remote access services require DTMF tones. These tones are used by regular telephones when you dial and when you answer questions from an automated voice service. If you are in a conversation and manually entering the numbers, no extra configuration is nec­essary. If, however, you want to send a number stored in memory, you must set DTMF to automatic.
Manually
To send individual DTMF tones di­rectly from the keypad during a conversation:
Press the required keys.
The tones are heard in the ear-
Using your phone
17
piece and sent immediately.
123
4
1
2
34123
4
Automatically
To send a consecutive string of DTMF tones during a conversation:
Press Options . Select Auto DTMF. Enter the DTMF numbers into
the display either directly using the keypad or from a number stored in the phone book (under Names ).
Press OK . The phone sends the tones and then shows the normal conversation display.
DTMF tones cannot be sent when a call is on hold.
Pause feature
You can enter and store telephone numbers and a sequence of DTMF tones together as long as you separate them by a 'pause'. To enter a pause between numbers, press and hold down . The letter p appears. The phone can store several pauses together for a maximum of 20-46 characters (dependent upon the SIM and the phone memory capaci­ty).
Holding and retrieving a call
To put a call on hold during a con­versation:
Press .
To retrieve a call:
Press .
To make a second call when one call is on hold:
Enter a number in the display. Press to dial the number.
After the second call has been established press to swap between the two calls.
To end either the current call or the held call select End
active or End held in the Options menu. The remain-
ing call is automatically retrieved
Press to end the remaining call.
Both calls can be ended at the same time by press­ing .
Alternatively, use Options to display a menu of the actions de­scribed above. Scroll to the re­quired option and press Select or (see also Multi-party or con­ference calls (network depend­ent), page19).Call waiting, swapping and multi-party confer­ence calls
Call waiting (network dependent)
Use call waiting, a network feature, to receive a second incoming call when already engaged in a call. This puts an existing call 'on hold' while you answer or make a second call. To turn the call waiting service on or off:
Press . Select Settings. Select GSM Services.
Select Call waiting. Select Activate or Cancel.
The network confirms your request. The confirmation can take several seconds.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the standby dis­play.
18
Action when receiving a second call
123
You hear a 'double beep' when your phone receives a second call. An an­imated phone icon and the tele­phone number (if available) also appear. To accept the second call
Press . This answers the second call and puts the first call on hold.
To reject the second call:
Press Reject . This returns a busy signal to the second caller.
To swap between the two connect­ed calls:
Press .
Multi-party or conference calls (net­work dependent)
Use this feature to make or receive between 2 to 5calls at the same time with all parties being able to hear and talk with each other.
Make and establish a call in the normal way and press .
Enter another number into the display and press . The first call is put on hold when the second call becomes active.
Press Options for the fol­lowing menu:
Option Description
Auto
DTMF
Swap
Join
Mute/
Unmute
End held Ends the call on hold
End ac-
tive
End all Ends all the calls
* Private
with
Hold/Re-
trieve
* End one
to enter a DTMF string to the active call only Swaps between active and call on hold Joins active and call on hold to make a multi­party or conference call Turns on or off the mi­crophone
Ends the active call and connects with the call on hold
Allows you to select and have a private con­versation with one of the conference callers while putting all the other calls on hold Holds or retrieves the conference call Allows you to select and end one of the conference call partici­pants
* These items in the Options menu appear if more than 2 calls are joined in the conference call. Throughout the conference call the display shows the actions you se­lected from the options menu.
For alternate line service (ALS), you cannot make subscribers conference calls between Line 1 and Line 2.
Using your phone
19
The menu
Use the round cursor key to access the menu system. Your menu options can vary. Some may not appear. This de­pends on your network operator and your subscription, plus on the phone version you have (check on box label).
Access to the menus
Press to view all stored telephone numbers. Press to enter the main menu. Hold down Exit or press to exit the menus (if no call is in progress).
Menu map
Internet
Network
Currency
Games
Office Tools
Settings
Calls & Times
Menu Sub-menu
Home page Inbox
Internet
Bookmarks Other site Profile list Settings Push parameters
Network
Server
Information Services
Server
Phone Book
Messages
Recall Store
Phone Book
Remaining Own numbers
Fixed dialling
Phone Book tones SMS*
Inbox Outbox Write new Settings
Messages
Calls & Times
Settings
Draft texts Alert Storage
EMS*
Inbox* My Services* Settings* Service Registration*
Calls log Call timers
Phone settings
Voice mail
GSM Services
Broadcast
Scratchpad
Office Tools
Games
Alarm clock Auto-switch Calculator
Reshape Push Options Exen Games**
Currency
Settings
Items in italics depend on your sub­scription and your network operator. * Available on Trium 110 m only ** Available on Trium 110 p only
Entering text
To add names to the phone books (see page 22) and write text messages (see page26) you must enter text. The phone displays in lower case mode and in upper case mode when you can enter text. Use the keypad to enter/ edit text. You can enter text/numbers using T9
20
text entry or Multitap text entry.Press
12345
12345
to swap between T9 text entry and the Multitap method.
To enter text with T9:
Press the key with the re­quired letter only once. Do not be put off if the char-
acter you want is not immedi­ately displayed.
The ‘active’ word changes as you type, so type to the end of the word.
If your word is not displayed, press for other matching words.
If your word is not recog­nised, press to swap to the Multitap method to complete the word.
Use or to locate the cur­sor in the text to insert char­acters or make corrections.
1. T9 may not be available in all languages.
2. During number and name entry a short press on Clear deletes the last character. A long press clears the whole display.
Tips and operation
Key Action
Shift - upper/lower case on next letter. Caps lock/unlock if
you press and hold it.
Clear Clear or backspace
Press and
hold
Numbers
Space
Special character ta-
ble appears if you
press and hold it.
Another matching
word
Smart punctuation
Swap between T9 and
Multitap method
Example To enter Card in the display:
• Press and select Messages.
• Select Write new.
• Press : appears.
• Press . A appears.
• Press . Ca appears.
• Press . Car appears.
• Press . Case appears. If the displayed word is not the one you want, press as many times as necessary to view Card.
• Press to exit from this example and return to the stand-by display.
Multitap text entry
Press on to swap between T9 text entry and the Multitap method. To enter text with multitap:
Press the key with the required letter. If it is not the first letter, press key repeat­edly until the letter appears. See the table that follows for a key to character corre­spondence.
Enter the next character. If two characters are on the same key, wait for the display at the top of the screen to clear or press before press­ing the same key again.
To access special charac­ters (23 availa-
ble), hold down . A table appears. Press the key that corresponds to the character.
Press Clear briefly to cor­rect back one letter. Hold down to clear all text.
Press or to move the cur­sor in the text to insert char­acters or make corrections.
The following table displays the available English characters. Other languages display different charac­ter sets.
The menu
21
Key Character
Lower case Upper case
1 . , - ' @ : ?
a b c 2 A B C 2 d e f 3 D E F 3 g h i 4 G H I 4
j k l 5 J K L 5 m n o 6 M N O 6 p q r s 7 P Q R S 7 t u v 8 T U V 8 w x y z 9 W X Y Z 9 0 0
Short press swaps next letter
between upper or lower case.
Long press swaps all next let-
ters between upper or lower
Long press gives access to
( ) % ! ; " _ @ § + # *
/ & = < > ¥ $ £ ¡ ¿
Short press moves the cursor
through the text one place.
Swap between Multitap and
Example To enter Card in the display:
• Press and select Messages.
• Select Write new.
• Press and hold until appears. Press briefly three times, C appears.
• Wait for the available characters to go from the display, press and
hold until appears. Press
briefly once, a appears.
• Press briefly three times, r appears.
• Press briefly once, d appears. The word Card appears.
• Press to exit from this example
case.
Short press
enters space.
special characters.
T9.
and return to the stand-by dis­play.
Network services
Your network operator provides value added services and contact phone num­bers. Depending on your operator’s im­plementation Applications, Services, and/or Information appears in the dis­play. Press and select Network Serv- ices to access these menus.
Phone book
The phone book stores data, usually names and telephone numbers, in the phone or SIM memory.
• The phone can store up to 100 ‘phone book cards’ which can con­tain: family name, first name, icon, home phone number, work phone number, cellular phone number and a note.
• SIMs can store up to 255 ‘SIM phone book cards’. Actual numbers and capacity depends on your SIM. SIM phone book cards only contain the name and number.
Both the SIM and the phone memories are searched when you use the phone book.
Storing names and telephone num­bers
You can enter the names and num­bers in the phone book manually or copy them from SMS messages, scratchpad or last dialled number lists, etc. You can store the charac­ters *, +, P (pause), # and _ togeth­er with numbers. See page 20 to learn how to enter text.
Store numbers in international format using the '+' prefix (or
00) before the country code followed by the telephone
22
number. This ensures that the
1
23456
7
8
912
341
2
3312345
number can also be dialled from abroad.
There are several ways to store numbers into the phone or SIM memory:
Phone memory
• Directly from the stand-by dis­play:
Enter the number. Press
Store .
Select Phone names. A list appears.
Select the item corresponding to the number you entered: home, work or cellular.
The following fields appear:
Field Purpose
Family name First name First name
Enter the requested data. Confirm each entry by press­ing OK
Family or last
.
name
Select an icon. The icons corre­spond
keys on the keypad. Press
to -
the key corresponding to the required icon. In this example pressing selects .
The following fields appear:
Field Purpose
Phone number
(Home)
Phone number
(Work)
Phone number
(Cellular)
Note
Home phone
number
Work phone
number
Cellular phone
number
Note or com-
ments for this
card
Enter the requested data. Press OK Confirmation and number of free locations appear.
.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
• Using the menu: Press . Select Phone Book. Select Store. Select Phone
names.
Follow the steps in the previ­ous procedure (“Directly from the stand-by display”) start-
ing with step .
• From last dialled, received and
unanswered lists:
Display a number from one of the above, then press
Options .
Select Store. Select Phone
names.
Follow the steps in the “Directly from the stand-by display” procedure starting
with step .
During number and name entry a short press on Clear clears the last character. A long press clears the whole display.
SIM phone book memory
You can enter the SIM memory from the stand-by display, menu or other locations.
• Directly from the stand-by display: Enter the number. Press Store . Select SIM names. Press OK . Modify or confirm the number and press OK . Enter the name. Press OK . Confirmation and number of free locations appear. Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by display.
The menu
23
• Using the menu:
12341
2
212
3
1
2
3
4
Press . Select Phone Book. Select Store. Select SIM
names.
Enter the number and press
OK . Enter the name and
press OK . Confirmation and number of remaining locations appears.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
• From other stored locations Numbers stored in the last dialled, received, unanswered, scratchpad and SMS message locations can all be stored in the phone book:
Display a number from one of the above then press
Options .
Follow the steps from the previous procedure “Using the menu” starting with step
.
During number and name entry a short press on Clear clears the last character. A long press clears the whole display.
A warning message appears when selecting the phone book when the SIM or phone memory is full.
Free space in the phone book
To see the remaining free space in the SIM or phone:
Press . Select Phone Book. Select Remaining and use
or to display the remaining memory spaces in the phone or SIM.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
If available, the free memories in the FDN list also appears.
Viewing and calling numbers in the phone book
You can edit, delete, copy, move or access phone book entries stored in
the phone or SIM. There are two ways to view and call numbers in the phone book:
• Directly from the stand-by display: Press to display the phone book
list.
• Using the menu:
Press and select Phone
Book.
Select Recall. Either press OK or enter up
to the first 3 initials of the name required and then press
OK .
Pressing or scrolls through the phone book. To go directly to another entry press the corre­sponding alphabet key. For exam­ple to go directly to entries starting with 'N' press twice. If you did not enter any initials, the phone book displays the first entry.
Press to dial the number. If there is a choice of numbers for the phone book entry, these appear. Select the one that corresponds and press
.
Pressing Options displays the following menu choices:
Item Function
Edit
Delete
Send SMS
Edits the name and
number entry
Deletes the entry
Sends SMS message
Copies the entry to the
Copy
SIM or the phone or
vice versa. You can
edit before copying
Moves the entry to an-
Move
other position. You
can edit before mov-
ing
Call
Calls the number dis-
played
24
Press and hold Exit or
512345123
412312312
3
4
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Own number
You can store your main 'Line 1' voice mobile number, your voice mobile number for Line 2 (Alternate Line Service) and your data and fax numbers into the SIM card. You can enter them manually and name them (e.g: Line 1 'Office'. To view, name and edit your own display number(s):
Press . Select Phone Book. Select Own numbers. The
mobile number for Line 1 appears.
Use or to view line 2, data and fax numbers.
To add or edit a name or number press Edit .
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Fixed dialling numbers (FDN)
Fixed dialling only allows you to call a group of numbers. All other num­bers are rejected. FDN also prevents call diverting and sending SMS mes­sages to numbers not in the FDN list. You can use wildcards to define the groups. As this is a SIM depend­ent feature, some SIM cards might not support it. SIM capacity deter­mines the maximum number of FDN numbers you can store. To ac­tivate/deactivate FDN you must have the PIN2 code. To turn on or off FDN operation:
Press . Select Phone Book. Select Fixed Dialling. Select
Status.
Select On or Off. Enter the PIN2 number.
Press OK to confirm the setting.
To view the numbers in the list:
Press . Select Phone Book. Select Fixed Dialling. Select View and use or
to scroll through the entries. Press Options to edit, delete and copy numbers to the phone or SIM.
To enter, edit or delete numbers in the FDN list:
Press . Select Phone Book. Select Fixed Dialling. Select Add new. Enter the
PIN2 number if asked. Add, edit, delete or copy new numbers to the phone or SIM.
You can use wild card spaces with numbers stored in the FDN list. For example the number +441707 278_ _ 9 allows you to call all num­bers between 278009 to 278999.
Phone book tones
30 pre-set ring tones are available, 10 with polyphonic (tri-tones) and 20 with mono-tones. Storage of up to 40 ring tones is possible. That is, you can add one self-composed ring tone and 9 other ring tones you download in addition to the ex­isting 30 ring tones. If you want, you can replace any of these ring tones except the Trium ring tone. To have different tones for incom­ing calls where the identities are known in the SIM or phone memo­ry:
Press . Select Phone Book. Select Phone Book Tones. Select Phone names or SIM
names. Press Select .
Select the tone you want and press Select . The phone stores your selection.
The menu
25
Messages (SMS)
123
4
12312
3
You can exchange short text messages of up to 160 characters with other mo­bile phones with SMS. You can also store, edit and forward messages and save any of the numbers they contain.
Reading a received SMS message
When the phone receives an SMS message a new SMS alert tone sounds and appears. The SIM stores the message. If flashes there is no more space in the SIM to store new messages. Delete previ­ous messages to make space for new ones.
Press Read to read all received messages (Inbox).
Reading stored SMS messages
Press . Select Messages (then SMS on Trium 110 m).
Select Inbox to display the first message header.
Use and to select the message.
Press or select Options /
Read text to read the mes-
sage text.
You can now read all stored mes­sages. For a given message, shows the message is new. shows you have already read the message.
Managing received and stored SMS messages
After reading the SMS message press Options for the following menu:
Item Function
Read text
Delete Deletes the message
Reply
Reply
(+ text)
Forward
Forward
to n
Displays the remain-
der of the text
Replies to the sender
of the message
Replies to the sender
of the message with
the initial text
Forwards the mes-
sage to another user
Forwards a set of sev-
eral (5 maximum)
messages to 5 differ-
ent addressees
Stores or calls the
Numbers
number(s) contained in the SMS header or
text
The items of this menu depend on the type of mes­sage received.
Turning on or off the message alert tone
Each time a message is received the SMS alert tone sounds. To turn on or off this tone:
Press . Select Messages. Select Alert. Select On or Off. Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Preparing the phone to send SMS messages
You can write and send text mes­sages. To use SMS, check that the number for the message centre is configured:
Press . Select Messages. Select Settings.
Select Message centre. If a number appears do nothing. If empty, enter the number man­ually (in international format) or from a stored memory. If you do
26
not have this number, ask your
412
3
45123451234561234
service provider for it.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis-
play. If required you can also choose the validity period, format, paid reply request and request a delivery re­port. Default settings are assumed if not set.
Option Description Default
Time held at message centre.
Validity
Period
12hours, 1day, 2 days or Maximum (defined by
Maxi­mum
operator) Selects for-
Format
mat of mes­sage, text,
Text voice, fax or pager
Paid
Reply to
Status
report to
Reply re­quested
Delivery re­port
Off
Off
Creating a draft text
Parts of a message are often the same, such as the greeting or signa­ture. To save time, you can create a draft text for these parts. Then when you want to write a message, you access the draft text and only write the specific part of the mes­sage. You can set up to 10 message drafts, which can hold up to 48 characters each. The mobile memo­ry stores the drafts. To create a draft text:
Press . Select Messages. Select Draft texts. Choose any blank template
([...]) and press Edit .
Enter the draft text and press
OK .
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Editing a draft text
Press . Select Messages. Select Draft texts. Select the draft text to modify
and press Edit . Edit the text and press OK . Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Sending a new SMS message to one addressee
Press . Select Messages. Select Write new. You can either choose a draft
text (if you set one up) or enter the message text and press OK .
Select Send. Choose a message template
(if you have stored 2 or more templates) and then enter the destination number or select
Names to choose a
number from a phone book entry. Press to validate your choice. Press OK . Sending and sent confirmation appears for each addressee.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Sending a new SMS message to many addressees
Press . Select Messages. Select Write new. You can either choose a draft
text (if you set one up) or enter the message text and press OK .
Select Multicast.
The menu
27
Choose a message template
5
612345123
4
12123
(if you have stored 2 or more templates). Enter up to 5 destination numbers or select Names to choose up to 5 numbers in the phone book. Press to validate your choice. Press OK . Sent confirmation appears.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Storing a new SMS message
Press . Select Messages. Select Write new. You can either choose a draft
text or enter the message text and press OK .
Select Store. Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Modifying and re-sending messag­es in the outbox
The outbox contains unsent draft messages, stored sent messages and sent but undelivered messages. You can modify and re-send these as new messages. To select an outbox message:
Press . Select Messages. Select Outbox and use or
to scroll to the desired message. Messages are either “transmitted” ( ) or “to be sent” ( ).
Press Options to read, delete, request a status report, send (or re-send) to one addressee, edit a sent message and send (or re­send) to many addressees.
Follow the instructions dis­played on the screen.
Status request on sent messages
If you request the status of a deliv­ered message the delivery date and
time appears. If you request the sta­tus of a sent message the network sends a status report (if this feature is supported). Press OK to ac­knowledge the report. To act upon a received status report and its related message:
Press Options . The follow­ing menu appears:
Item Action
Deletes the corre-
Delete
message
sponding sent SMS
message and the sta-
tus report
Clear
To acknowledge the
status report and
clear the display
Associ-
ated
message
Send
again
Displays the corre-
sponding sent SMS
message
Sends the same mes-
sage again
Select the action required and press OK .
Re-usable message templates
The Msg templates menu option appears in the Messages - Settings menu if your SIM supports this fea­ture. Message templates are sets of message parameters and are stored in SIM memory. You can name and select the templates when needed. To create a message template:
Press . Select Messages. Select Settings.
Select Msg templates. Choose any blank template ([...]).
Enter the template Name,
Message centre number, Validity period and Format.
Default settings for pay reply and status are assumed 'off' unless set and are common to all templates. If you set one template only the
28
phone uses it by default. Otherwise
1234123
4
1234512
3
select the template you want when sending a message.
Storage consumption
To consult the memory used by SMS:
Press . Select Messages. Select Storage. Use or to view all the
SMS storage information (SMS storage, SMS outbox and SMS inbox).
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
1
EMS
EMS stands for Enhanced Message Se­vice. This feature allows to receive mes­sages with text, melodies, images and animated icons. These messages are sent via the Internet; they may bear pro­motional information or commercial of­fers. The use of this feature is registration de­pendent and may not be available in all areas.
EMS Menu
Press . Select Messages Select EMS. Select the menu item you
want to access. Press Cancel or to
return to the stand-by display.
Inbox
To read or delete stored messages
My services
To reach the list of registered services
Settings
To reset or delete the EMS contents
Service Registration
To enter the address of the service sites.
1. Available on Trium 110 m only
Reading a received EMS message
When the phone receives an EMS message a new alert tone sounds and appears. The phone stores the message. If flashes there is no more space in the phone to store new messages. Delete previous messages to make space for new ones.
Press Read to read all received messages (Inbox).
Reading stored EMS messages
Press . Select Messages. Select EMS. Select Inbox. Use and to select the
message. Press or select OK to read
the message text or delete the message.
You can now read all stored mes­sages. For a given message,
shows the message is new. shows you have already read the
message.
Calls & Times
Access the Calls & Times menu to check the details of individual incoming and outgoing calls, the duration of the last call or the total time for all previous calls.
Calls log
Calls log stores the identity, time, date and call duration of the last 10numbers dialled, the last 10 re­ceived unanswered calls and the last 10received calls. The call logs are common for both Line 1 and Line 2.
Press . Select Calls & Times. Select Calls Log. Select Last dial, Unan-
swered or Received.
The menu
29
Use or to scroll through
412
345612345
the list.
If the caller’s number is not availa­ble, Unknown number appears (unanswered and received lists). Pressing while on a displayed number calls that number. Pressing Options accesses the following menu:
Item Action
Store
Delete Delete
all
Edit
Stores the number in
the phone book
Deletes the entry
Deletes all the entries
Edits the displayed
number
Views the details -
Details
name, number, time
and date and call dura-
tion of the highlighted
number
Call
Send
Makes a call to the
number
Sends SMS message
SMS
Use or to select the required option and follow the display prompts. Press and hold Exit or to re­turn to the stand-by display.
Press when in stand-by display to access the last 10 dialled calls.
Call times
Call times stores the duration of the last call, total accumulated time of all calls and total time for Line 1 and Line 2. The Details sub-menu stores times for calls made and re­ceived through the subscription network and through other (nation­al and international) networks.
Press . Select Calls & Times. Select Call timers.
Select Show. Use or to view all the
timer information. The call type and the accumulat­ed times of outgoing and incom­ing calls appears.
Press Details to display
details on My network,
National roaming and
Int’nal roaming calls.
Press or Exit to return to
the previous display.
Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis-
play.
If Line 2 is subscribed to 'All Calls' for Line 1 and Line 2 appear separately.
Balance information (subscription service only)
Some networks provide your call time balance. You have to call a specific number (given by your net­work operator) in order to get this information. Contact your service provider for availability and details.
Press . Select Calls & Times.
Select Call timers.
Select Balance information.
Select Set number (only nec-
essary the first time you use
this service) to check that the
balance information centre
number is set. If not, enter
the number provided by your
service provider and press
OK .
Select Call. The phone calls the
centre. Press when you
want to end the call.
30
Press and hold Exit or
612345671234561
23456781234512345
6
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Reminder - Call duration
You can set a call duration reminder in multiples of 1 minute (1 - 59 min.) intervals. It beeps at the set intervals.
Press . Select Calls & Times. Select Call timers. Select Reminder. Select On (or Off). Select the period (between 1
and 59 mins). Press OK . Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Call timer - reset
To reset all the call timers, you need the 4 digit phone lock code.
Press . Select Calls & Times. Select Call timers. Select Reset. Select Yes or No. Enter the phone lock code
and press OK . Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Call costs management (subscrip­tion service only)
An Advice of Charge (AoC) subscrip­tion service shows the cost of the last call made, the accumulated to­tal cost of all calls and the remain­ing balance in units or currency of any 'cost limit' you set. Check with your service provider to see if they offer this feature.Select the curren­cy and cost per unit; otherwise call costs display in generic units. To set currency and cost per unit:
Press . Select Calls & Times.
Select Call costs. Select Display cost type. Select Currency. The present
currency settings appears. Press Edit . Enter the PIN 2
code and press OK . Enter the abbreviated letters
of the currency. Press OK . Enter the cost per unit in the
selected currency. Press
OK .
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
To set call cost type to units:
Press . Select Calls & Times. Select Call costs. Select Display cost type. Select Units. Press and hold Exit or to
return to the stand-by display.
When you set the cost type to units the credit limit and the remaining credit appear in units.
Setting the credit limit - in units or currency
You can set a credit limit in units or currency. The phone prevents mak­ing and receiving all chargeable calls when the phones reaches the credit limit. You can still make emergency calls.
Press . Select Calls & Times. Select Call costs. Select Credit Limit. The
present credit limit setting appears.
Press Edit . Enter the PIN 2 code and press OK .
Enter the credit limit (use to enter a decimal point). Press OK to validate.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
When you enter a credit limit the selection from the 'Credit Limit' displays Edit or Set No Limit.
The menu
31
Show costs
12345
1234512
3
412341234
5
Press . Select Calls & Times. Select Call costs. Select Show. Use or to display the
cost of the Last Call, All Calls and the Remaining credits.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
The Cost Type menu units or currency setting deter­mines whether the remaining credit displays units or currency.
Call costs - resetting all costs to zero
To reset all the call costs to zero you need the PIN 2 code.
Press . Select Calls & Times. Select Call costs. Select Reset. Select Yes to reset the costs
or No to exit. If you select Yes, enter the PIN 2 number and press
OK . All Costs Reset
appears briefly. Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Alternate line service - selecting Line 2 (subscription service)
Some GSM 1800 operators support the use of a second line for users. You can have two mobile phone numbers, e.g. a business and per­sonal line. To select the line for out­going calls:
Press . Select Calls & Times. Select Line selection.
The current line selection appears.
Use or to scroll to the line required and press
Select or to validate
your choice.
Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis-
play.
You can assign names to Line 1 and Line 2, e.g. Office and Home. See page 25 for details. You must select the line to make outgoing calls. You can receive calls from either line.
Settings - customising your phone
Phone settings
Keypad lock
See page 15 for more informa­tion.
Language selection
To select the language of your choice:
Press . Select Settings.
Select Phone settings. Select
Language.
Use or to select a lan-
guage from the displayed list.
Press Select to validate.
Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis-
play.
To reset the phone to the language of the SIM enter *#0000#. To reset the phone language to English enter *#0044#.
Tones - Alert mode
To turn on or off the audible in­coming ring tone, alert and alarm tones:
• Using the menu:
Press . Select Settings.
Select Phone settings. Select
Tones.
Select Alert tones.
Select Ring, Vibrate, Vibrate
& ring or Vibrate then ring.
Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis-
play.
32
• Directly from the stand-by dis-
121234561
23456
7
play:
Press displays Ring, Silent,
Vibrate, Vibrate & ring or Vibrate then ring.
Scroll to the desired setting. Press Select to validate your
choice. (If any of the vibrate options are selected the phone briefly vibrates). appears.
1. If you select Ring but the ring tone volume is off the icon appears.
2. appears if you select Vibrate, Vibrate & ring or Vibrate then ring. It takes precedence over .
3. When the phone is connected to either the Desk Top Charger, HF kit, CLA or AC adaptor the phone rings instead of vibrates.
4. If you choose the 'Vibrate' or 'Vibrate then ring' option, the vibrating action replaces all the alert and alarm tones.
Ring tone selection
To choose an incoming ring tone:
Press . Select Settings. Select Phone settings. Select
Tones.
Select Melodies. To help you identify incoming
calls you can give the Stand-
ard/Line 1, Phone names, SIM names and Line 2 calls
and Alarm different ring tones. Use or to highlight the required call type and press to select it.
Use or to listen to the different ring tones. Press to select the current tone.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Volume adjustments
To individually adjust the volume level of the ring tone, key tones, alarm tones and incoming audio from the stand-by display, press . Alternatively, access Volume con­trol from the
Settings
menu:
Press . Select Settings.
Select Phone settings. Select
Tones.
Select Volume. Select Ring, Keys, Conversa-
tion or Alarm.
The display confirms the selec­tion, naming the volume to be adjusted.
Use or to adjust the set­ting.
Press OK to validate the setting.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
During a call, you can adjust the conversation volume by using or .
If the ring tone volume level is set to 0 displays.
Automatic ramping
Your phone was designed with an automatic ramping feature. When your phone rings, the vol­ume level is lower than the vol­ume level you have set. Adjustment is made from low or medium volume level to the vol­ume level you have set (see “Vol­ume adjustments”, page33). This feature is a default setting and cannot be deactivated. Ram­ping and Automatic Ramping are compatible; both will work if Ramping is activated.
Ramping
Ramping causes the incoming ring tone to increase step by step to the maximum volume level.
The menu
33
Press . Select Settings.
123
4561234512345
6
1234123451234
1
Select Phone settings. Select
Tones.
Select Volume. Select Ramping. Select On or Off. Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
When turned on the volume of the incoming ring tone starts from the selected ringer volume (just after the automatic ramping) and rises to the max­imum volume.
Backlight - setting
To set the backlight during key entry or incoming ring tone, you have two options:
On for 10 sec.: the display and key backlight stays on for 10seconds after the last key press or incoming call.
Off: the backlight stays off except on incoming call.
Press Select. Select Settings. Select Phone settings. Select
Display.
Select Backlight. Select one of the two set-
tings. Press to validate. Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Display contrast
To modify the display contrast be­cause of bad light conditions:
Press . Select Settings. Select Phone settings. Select
Display.
Select Contrast. Adjust the contrast using
or . Press OK to validate the
setting. Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Menu graphics
Choose from a set of graphics to personalise your main menu im­ages and icons. There are 3 menu themes.
To change the menu graphics:
Press . Select Settings. Select Phone settings. Select
Menu graphics.
Use or to scroll the sets of menu graphics and press
Select to validate your
choice. Press and hold Exit or to
return to the stand-by display.
Any key answer
To enable any key (except and
No ring ) to be pressed to an-
swer an incoming call:
Press . Select Settings. Select Phone settings. Select
Keys.
Select Any key answer. Select On or Off. Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Softkeys - programming the softkeys
You can change the function of the softkeys. There are two ways:
• Directly from the stand-by dis­play:
Press and hold down the left
or right .
Use or to scroll through the choice of softkey options.
Press Select to validate your choice.
The screen confirms your selection and returns to the stand-by display showing your new softkey function.
• Using the menu:
Press . Select Settings.
34
Select Phone settings. Select
23456123456
123451234
5
Keys.
Select Softkeys functions. Select Left softkey or Right
softkey.
Press Select on the softkey option of your choice.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
(......) in the display means that a previously SIM
dependent or subscription service assigned to that softkey is no longer available. For example Line 2 selection.
Speed dialling
You can assign phone book num­bers to keys - . Hold down the key to dial the number. The phone reserves exclusively for the voice mail number. The phone automatically assigns this key to the voice mail number if stored (see “Voice mail”, page38). You can select any stored number. To assign phone book numbers to the speed dialling keys:
Press . Select Settings. Select Phone settings. Select
Keys.
Select Speed Dial. Use or to scroll to the
next key. Select Names to choose
the phone book entry and press Select to validate your choice.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
If you delete the number from the phone book this also deletes it from the associated key.
Auto answer
This feature only works when you connect the phone to a hands free car kit or headset. The phone
automatically answers an incom­ing call after approximately 5 sec­onds.
Press . Select Settings. Select Phone settings. Select
Auto features.
Select Auto-answer. Select On or Off. Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Auto-retry
To automatically retry the number of a failed call (up to 10times):
Press . Select Settings. Select Phone settings. Select
Auto features.
Select Auto-retry. Select On or Off. Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
When activated, Auto-retry and a countdown timer to the next call attempt appears. An auto-retry warning tone sounds each time the phone attempts a new retry. If successful, proceed with the call as normal. Press Exit or any key during the retrying proc­ess to cancel auto-retry and end the dialling process for that call.
Security features
The security features described in this section protects your phone from unauthorised use. For all codes When requested, enter the code, which appears as asterisks (*) and press OK . If you make a mistake press
Clear and enter the correct
digit(s) before pressing OK .
The menu
35
Avoid using codes similar to emergency numbers
12345612345
6
1234512
345
such as 999 or 112 to prevent accidental dialling of these numbers.
KEEP A RECORD OF YOUR CODES AND KEEP THEM IN A SAFE PLACE. FAILURE TO DO SO CAN CAUSE YOU CONSIDERABLE IN­CONVENIENCE. Phone lock code A phone lock code prevents unau­thorised access to the phone and WAP™ settings. You also need it to reset the call timers. The facto­ry setting is 0000. Reset this code and keep it in a safe place, sepa­rate from the phone. When ena­bled the phone asks for the code each time the phone is turned on. To change the phone lock code:
Press . Select Settings. Select Phone settings. Select
Security.
Select Phone lock. Select Change code and fol-
low the display prompts. Press OK to validate the
new code. Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
To turn on or off the phone lock code:
Press . Select Settings. Select Phone settings. Select
Security.
Select Phone lock. Select On or Off. The phone requests the
phone lock code to authorise your selection.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Phone lock still enables you to make emergency calls.
PIN code The 4-8 digit PIN code for the SIM protects it from unauthorised use. When enabled the phone re­quests the PIN code each time the phone is turned on. If you enter the wrong PIN code three times in succession your SIM card is blocked and you need the 8 digit PUK code from your service pro­vider (see page 37). To turn on and off the PIN:
Press . Select Settings. Select Phone settings. Select
Security.
If already off, PIN enable appears. If already on, PIN disable and PIN change appear.
Press Select and follow the displayed prompts.
Press OK to validate your entry. PIN enabled or PIN
disabled appear briefly to
confirm your action. Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
To change the PIN code (PIN must first be enabled):
Press . Select Settings. Select Phone settings. Select
Security.
Select PIN change and follow the displayed prompts.
Press OK to validate your new PIN.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
PIN2 code The PIN2 code prevents unau­thorised access to FDN opera­tions, modifying the FDN phone book, setting calls costs to zero, modifying the costs display fea­tures. You can change it but you
36
can not turn it on or off.
1234512
3456123
4
To change the PIN2 code:
Press . Select Settings. Select Phone settings. Select
Security.
Select PIN2 change and fol­low the display prompts.
Press OK to validate your new PIN2 code.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
PUK code Only your service provider can give you the 8 digit PUK (PIN un­block key). Use it to 'unblock' a PIN whose code has been entered incorrectly three times. A PUK code cannot be changed. Enter the PUK code and press
OK . Enter a new PIN code by
following the displayed prompts.
If you enter the wrong PUK code 10 times in suc­cession your SIM card cannot be used again. Con­tact your service provider for a new card.
PUK2 code Only your service provider can give you the 8 digit PUK2. Use it to unblock a PIN2 whose code has been entered incorrectly three times. You cannot change the PUK2 code. Enter the PUK2 code. Enter a new PIN2 code by following the dis­played prompts.
If you enter the wrong PUK2 code 10 times in suc­cession you are unable to use the features requir­ing the PIN2 code. Contact your service provider for a new card.
Time & date setting
To set the current time and/or date:
Press . Select Settings. Select Phone settings. Select
Time & date.
Select Set time or Set date. Enter the time (in 24 hour
format) or date in the format shown. (If required use and )
Press OK to validate your entry.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
1. An error message appears if you make a wrong entry.
2. The time/date are displayed when the phone is on. It does not show the year.
3. You may have to re-enter the time and date if the battery was taken out.
Default (factory) settings
Use the Settings menu to return to the factory settings. This does not affect the phone book en­tries, phone lock code or SIM.
Press . Select Settings. Select Phone settings. Select
Default settings.
Select Yes or No. Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
The following are the factory de­fault settings:
Feature Factory setting
Alert Tones Ring
Ring Tones
Volumes,
Ring, Key,
Speech and
Alarm.
Backlight and
Contrast Any Key,
Auto-Retry
and Auto An-
swer fea-
tures.
Ramping
Menu graph-
ics
Trium
Mid values
On for 10 sec. and
mid value
Off
Off
Trium
The menu
37
Melody download
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3
412
3
You can also download melodies from the Trium web site (www.mitsubishi-telecom.com). This site downloads the melodies to your phone using SMS. When the download completes,
Press Options and then select Play to play the melody. Press Options and then select Install to store the melody.
Voice mail
Voice mail operates like an answer­ing machine. Contact your service provider for details.
Storing a voice mail centre number
If your SIM does not automatical­ly include the voice mail centre number, you must manually set it:
Press . Select Settings. Select Voice Mail. Select Number. When
prompted enter the number manually or from a stored memory.
Press OK to validate your entry.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
If you subscribe to the 'Line 2' service, store the voice mail centre number separately for that line. The phone automatically assigns the voice mail number to speed dial location number 1 (see Speed dialling on page 35).
Turning on/off the voice mail alert tone
To turn on/off the voice mail alert tone:
Press . Select Settings. Select Voice Mail. Select Alert. Select On or Off.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis-
play. Calling the voice mail centre to check for messages
There are two ways:
• To dial the voice mail centre directly after the receipt of a
message:
Press and hold down .
• Or from the menu:
Press . Select Settings. Select Voice Mail.
Select Call. Dialling proceeds as for a normal call.
If a voice mail number is not stored when you select Call, the phone asks you to enter the voice mail number. Proceed as described in Storing a voice mail centre number, page 38.
GSM services
The services described hereafter are a non-exhaustive list of GSM services. Please contact your op­erator/service provider for more information.
38
Diverting incoming calls (network
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67123451234
service)
Call diverting diverts incoming calls, whether voice, fax or data, to another number. To turn on call divert:
Press . Select Settings. Select GSM Services.
Select Call diverting to access the following menu:
Divert op-
tions
Always
Action
Diverts all incom-
ing voice calls un-
conditionally
Diverts all voice
When not
reachable
calls when the
phone cannot be
reached, i.e. out
of service
Diverts all voice
On no reply
calls when the
phone does not
answer
When busy
Diverts all voice
calls when the
phone is busy
Diverts all voice
All conditions
Cancel all
All FAX calls
calls when Not
Reachable, No Re-
ply and When
Busy
Cancels all diverts
Diverts uncondi-
tionally all incom-
ing fax calls
All DATA calls
Diverts uncondi-
tionally all incom-
ing data calls
Use or to select the divert condition and validate by pressing Select or .
Select Activate. Use or to choose
between Voice Mail, Names or Number.
Press Select or to vali­date your selection. The display confirms your request.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
1. If you select 'On no reply' option you must also enter a delay period of 5, 15 or 30 seconds.
2. Call diverts for both Line 1 and Line 2 must be set individually. Select the out-going line before following the above procedure. To carry out a call divert on the other line you must select this other line first (menu Calls & Times - Line selection).
To turn off or check the status of call divert:
Press . Select Settings. Select GSM Services. Select
Call diverting.
Select from the divert options and press .
Select Cancel or Status. The phone confirms your selection.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
To cancel all (multiple) diverts:
Press . Select Settings. Select GSM Services. Select
Call diverting.
Select Cancel all. The phone confirms your selection.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
This action cancels all voice diverts (for voice, faxes and data calls) for the line currently in use. To can­cel call diverts for the other line you must select this other line first (menu Calls & Times - Line selec­tion).
Caller Line Identity - showing/hiding your mobile number
Most networks allow the Caller Line Identity feature (CLI) i.e. showing the incoming number (ID) while receiving a call. Select-
The menu
39
ing Receiving caller ID allows
12312345123
451234123
4
5
you to check its availability from the network. Receiving caller ID To find out whether a network presents the ID of incoming calls:
Press . Select Settings. Select GSM Services. Select
Receiving caller ID.
The network returns either
Presentation available or Presentation unavailable.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
To hide your number, on a call by call basis, add #31# before the number you are calling. Alterna­tively you can ask your service op­erator to always disable the sending of your mobile number. In this case to reveal your number, on a call by call basis, add *31# before the number you wish to call. Standard network setting To reset the standard network setting for sending your mobile ID:
Press . Select Settings. Select GSM Services. Select
Sending my ID.
Select My settings. Select Preset. The phone
resets to the network setting agreed with your service pro­vider.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Hiding or showing your number
Press . Select Settings. Select GSM Services. Select
Sending my ID.
Select My settings.
Select Hide my ID or Show
my ID.
Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis-
play. Finding out your current ID set-
ting
Press . Select Settings.
Select GSM Services. Select
Sending my ID.
Select Status.
The phone displays your cur-
rent setting, taking into
account both network and
phone settings.
Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis-
play.
Network
When turned on, the phone auto­matically searches for the last net­work it was registered on. If this is not available, the phone auto­matically searches and, if able and allowed, selects a network. Editing the preferred list You can change the order and names in the preferred networks list stored in your SIM by choos­ing from the list in your phone. This is useful while roaming if you know a network provider that is more economical than another.
Press . Select Settings.
Select GSM Services. Select
Network.
Select Preferred list. A list of
networks appears.
Use or to view the list.
Press Options to change it.
The following items appear:
40
Option Description
67123412345
61234
5
Modify by list
Modify by
code
Delete Deletes an entry
Press Select to confirm the selection.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis-
Displays the gener-
al list of all known
networks con-
tained in the
phone in alphabet-
ical order
Edits or enters a network number
(MCC MNC) if you
know this informa-
tion.
play.
Your SIM may contain a forbid­den list of networks which cannot be used. To view the forbidden list or show the home network:
Press . Select Settings. Select GSM Services. Select
Network.
Select either Forbidden or
Home network.
A list of the forbidden net­works or the home network appears.
Press to return to the stand-by display.
Selecting manual search To select a specific network, e.g. one which provides better cover­age in your current location:
Press . Select Settings. Select GSM Services. Select
Network.
Select Search. Select Manual. A confirma-
tion screen and Scanning for
networks... appears.
Use or to select a net­work from the list shown.
Press Select to confirm the selection.
Requesting... followed by
the name of the network appears. The phone then returns to the stand-by dis­play.
You cannot delete a network from the forbidden list. This list is automatically updated when you perform the manual network selection.
Selecting automatic search (normal default setting)
To perform an automatic search from the preferred list:
Press . Select Settings. Select GSM Services. Select
Network.
Select Search. Select Automatic. Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
The menu
41
Call barring (network service)
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6
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3
To stop different types of calls be­ing made and received on the phone, you need a call barring password available only from your service provider.
Press . Select Settings. Select GSM Services. Select
Call barring.
Select Outgoing calls or
Incoming calls. Choose:
Select Meaning
Outgoing
- All outgoing
Bars all outgo-
ing calls
Bars only all
Outgoing
- Int'nal calls
outgoing in-
ternational
calls
Bars all outgo-
ing interna-
Outgoing
- Int'nal excl. home
Incoming
- All incoming
tional calls
except for oth-
er subscribers within the us­ers home net-
work
Bars all incom-
ing calls
Bars all incom-
Incoming
- Roaming only
ing calls when
not on the
home network
Select the option using or
. Press Select .
Select Activate. Enter the password and press OK . The network confirms the selection.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Call barring password Use the call barring password to select the call barring levels out­lined in the GSM Services - Call
barring menu (see page 42). Your
service provider gives you the ini-
tial password. To change the password:
Press . Select Settings. Select GSM Services. Select
Call barring.
Select Change password and follow the displayed prompts.
Press OK to validate. Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Summary of code/password entry chart
Pass­word
Phone unlock code
PIN
PIN2
PUK 8 digits 10 tries
PUK2 8 digits 10 tries
Call bar­ring pass­word
Length
4 digits Unlimited
4-8 digits
4-8 digits
4 digits
Number of trials allowed
3 tries
3 tries
Network deter­mined
To cancel or check the status of a call bar:
Press . Select Settings. Select GSM Services. Select
Call barring.
Use or to select the bar
If
blocked
or
forgot-
ten
Return phone to manufac­turer Un­blocked by use of PUK code Un­blocked by use of PUK2 code Contact your serv­ice pro­vider Contact your serv­ice pro­vider
Contact your serv­ice pro­vider
42
to cancel or check the status
41234
1
23456712345
and press . You must have the password to cancel a call bar.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
To change the password:
Press . Select Settings. Select GSM Services. Select
Call barring.
Select Change password. Enter the old password once and the new password twice when prompted. The phone confirms the change.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Broadcast - cell broadcast messag­es (Network Service)
Networks can broadcast messages to all GSM users that can give infor­mation about local area dialling codes, weather reports, traffic news etc. You can decide what type of in­formation to receive by choosing the corresponding number. You can program to receive up to 5 dif­ferent types of messages. You can select from a list of 16 standard message types. New mes­sage types can be programmed into the selection list using the 3 digit cell broadcast type number. Con­tact your service provider for more details. Enter at least one message type into the selection list or you cannot acti­vate the service. To enter a message type in the se­lection list
You can enter up to 5 different message types.
Press . Select Settings.
Select Broadcast. Select Message types. Press
Options .
Select Modify by list (or Mod-
ify by code if type number is
known). Scroll to the message type
required. Press Select to validate your selection. The display confirms your choice.
Press Options again to select more message types from the list, enter a message type number if known, or delete a message type.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis-
play. To turn on or off the broadcast service
Press . Select Settings.
Select Broadcast.
Select On/Off.
Select On or Off.
Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis-
play.
Reading broadcast messages
Broadcast messages appear in the stand-by display only. The phone suppresses them during conver­sation or menu operation. A mes­sage can be up to 93 characters in length and cover several pages. Pages scroll automatically about every five seconds. To scroll down, press. Options during message display Press on Exit to clear the mes­sage currently displayed. Press to dial the number displayed in the message. Pressing Options displays the following menu:
The menu
43
Option Action
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4512312
3
Delete
To delete the cur-
rent message
Delete All
To delete all mes-
sages stored in
the queue
Numbers
To display all
phone numbers
found in the mes-
sage text. This al-
lows dialling or storing them in
the scratchpad if
required
Broadcast
Off
To turns off cell
broadcast
Turning the broadcast alert tone on or off
To turn on or off the alert tone the phone gives when a broad­cast message arrives:
Press . Select Settings. Select Broadcast. Select Alert. Select On or Off. Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Deleting or editing a message type from the list
To delete or edit a message type:
Press . Select Settings. Select Broadcast. Select Message types. Press
Options .
Select Modify by list or Mod-
ify by code.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Broadcast language
To select the broadcast language:
Press . Select Settings. Select Broadcast. Select Language.
Use or to select a lan­guage from the displayed list. Press to validate.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Using the office tools
The Office Tools menu contains a scratchpad, an alarm clock, an auto­switch feature and a calculator.
Scratchpad
You can store up to 5 separate en­tries of 36 characters in the scratch­pad.
Press . Select Office Tools. Select Scratchpad. Select Read Notes. Use or
to scroll through the entries. Select Write Notes to make a new scratchpad entry.
Press Options when reading en­tries to access the following menu:
Item Action
Store
Edit Modify an entry
Delete
Delete all
Call
Save a number to
the phone book
Delete an entry
Delete all entries
Call the number displayed in the
entry
Alarm clock To set a daily 'Reminder Alarm':
When 'on' the alarm activates at the same time every day until turned off.
Press . Select Office Tools. Select Alarm clock. Select On and enter the alarm
time (in 24 hour format) or press OK to accept the dis­played time. Confirmation appears.
44
Press Select or to return to
41234
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567123435
the stand-by display.
appears. The alarm sounds for up to 1minute. Alarm clock and a vibrat­ing bell symbol appear with the cur­rent time and the softkeys,
Valid. and No ring . During a
call, the alarm also sounds. To stop the alarm:
Press Valid. .
To use as a Reminder or Snooze Alarm:
Press No ring , or any other key (except Valid. ) to stop the alarm. The alarm icon remain on the display and the alarm rings again 3 minutes later.
You can repeat the snooze for up to 15 minutes, after which the phone returns to its previous state, either off or on stand-by. To turn off the alarm:
Press . Select Office Tools. Select Alarm clock. Select Off. Confirmation
appears. Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Caution - Please remember to turn off the alarm feature when boarding an aircraft where the use of a mobile phone is not permitted and is illegal. Alterna­tively, you can remove the bat­tery after turning off the phone. See the General safety warnings on page 4.
Auto-switch
You can set your phone to switch on and off automatically. Turning it off helps to conserve battery life. Please note that during auto-switch
on, you must re-enter your PIN code. The phone does not go into power saving mode until you enter your code. To activate the auto­switch:
Press . Select Office Tools. Select Auto-switch. Select Auto-switch-on. Select On. Enter the time you want the
phone to turn on and press OK . Confirmation appears.
Select Auto-switch-off. Select On. Enter the time you want the
phone to turn off and press OK .
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play. The icon appears in the stand-by display.
To turn off the auto-switch:
Press . Select Office Tools. Select Auto-switch. Select Auto-switch-on. Select Off. Stored appears. Select Auto-switch-off. Select Off. Stored appears. Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Calculator
To access and use the calculator:
Press . Select Office Tools. Select Calculator. Enter a number and press
several times to choose +, -,
* or / or to enter a ,.
Enter the second number and either repeat step or select
= to compute. Select Clear to correct any mis-
takes or clear the display. Press to return to the
stand-by display.
The menu
45
Games
1
2
The availability and appearance of the games depend on your network opera­tor and on your mobile phone version (Reshape and Push games are available on Trium 110 and Trium 110 m only).
Reshape and Push:
Game instructions appear when you select the game. Select sound effects from the menu item Options. To select a game:
Press . Select Games. Choose the game (Push or
Reshape) and press Select or .
When in the game,
Item Action
Play
Select Play to start the game (from the lowest level).
Help
Code
Select Help for instructions and controls.
If you have already played the game and reached a certain skill level, select
Code to enter the
level code and play the game from that level.
Reshape and Push have skill levels.
When you win a level, you go to the next level. After successfully playing 'X' number of levels the game gives you a code to enable you to re-enter the game from your previously at­tained skill level. The game can record player names and scores. If you receive a call while playing, an­swer in the normal way. To exit from the games menu press Exit
or press to return to the stand-by display.
Receiving an incoming call while playing may not allow you to resume the current game.
Trium 110 p games
The Trium 110 p Games menu al­lows the downloading of new games onto your mobile. Up to 2 games can be stored in the phone. One is a default one. You cannot delete or replace this game. The second game may not have been downloaded in your phone; if not, you can download it by choos­ing it from the Catalogue menu. You can replace the second game by another one from the catalogue as many times as you want. The Catalogue allows you to get the list and description of the games you can download. If the contents of the catalogue is not available on the phone it can also be downloaded. All information related to games downloading is available in the In­structions menu.
The Trium 110 p games menu is made of the following sub-men­us: Catalogue, News, Settings and Instructions in addition to the available game(s) name(s).
This phone version does not bear the Reshape and Push games.
46
Item Action
12345
1
234
Select Catalogue to see and/or
Catalogue
download games available on the network.
Select News to
News
get information on new games availability.
Select Settings to
Settings
access the sound, backlight... set­tings common to all games.
Select Instruc-
Instructions
tions for all infor-
mation related to games download­ing.
Receiving an incoming call while playing may not allow you to resume the current game.
Currency-converter
To use the converter, set the curren­cies and the exchange rate:
Press . Select Currency. Select Settings. Enter the first currency name
(e.g. Dollar). Press OK . Enter the second currency name (e.g. Yen). Press OK .
Enter the exchange rate using
to enter a comma. Press OK to validate the entry.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
To use your Currency-converter as a Euro converter for participating currencies in the European Mone­tary Union (“Euroland currencies”), please enter the complete Euro exchange rate with six signifi­cant figures. For example: 1 Euro = £ 0.61871.
To calculate the conversion be­tween the chosen currencies:
Press . Select Currency.
Select one of the two first options. In our example: either Dollar-
>Yen or Yen->Dollar.
Enter the amount to be con­verted. Press to insert a comma, if needed. Press
OK . The converted amount
appears. Press and hold Exit or
to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Conversion from one Euroland currency to another, or to non-Euroland currencies, normally follows "triangulation" rules (i.e. conversion of local cur­rency to Euro and then Euro to other local cur­rency). Your Currency-converter does not provide this possibility. Accordingly, your result is only a close approximation.
Internet/Wireless Application Protocol (WAP™)
Your phone has a WAP™ internet browser to access services, such as stock buying, news, sports, weather, TV listings etc., supplied by your operator and/or your internet provider. The
types of services offered depend on the internet provider and net­work operator.
You must have a DATA subscription to access these services. Either your phone is pre-programmed with the settings or you must enter them. See below to enter the settings. If you cannot access the settings, they are pre­programmed.
Access to the connection settings depend upon whether the settings have been pre-programmed prior to shipment from the factory. In some cases and to avoid errors these settings are 'locked' and are not user programmable.
Storing/editing connection settings (operator provided)
You can enter up to 5 different pro­files.
The menu
47
To enter and store the profile de-
123456712
3
412
3
tails:
Press . Select Internet. Select Profile list. Select an empty profile ([...])
and press Options . Select Edit.
Enter the 4 digit phone lock code (default code 0000) and press OK .
Enter all settings (the settings depend on your operator).
To activate the required pro­file, use or to select it from the displayed list. Press Options and select Select to validate.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
1. You can also access the Internet menu directly by pressing the Internet softkey from the stand-by dis­play (provided you have not personalised the left softkey).
2.If the phone number, login names and pass-
word, Home page http address and IP address are not predefined, get these from your network opera­tor and/or internet provider.
Personalising your connection set­tings Optimise the behaviour of your phone while connected to the inter­net with the following settings:
Press . Select Internet. Select Settings. Scroll to the following items
and turn on or off as required:
Option Action
Clears the memo-
ry used to store
Clear cache
information that
you downloaded. To clear this mem­ory, select the Yes
option.
Select the Off op-
tion to reject pic-
Download
pictures
ture
downloading.
This decreases the
page download-
ing time.
Used to allow or
Scripting
forbid the execu-
tion of scripts
within a page.
Disconnects the
mobile from the
internet after a
set period of inac-
Auto-
disconnect
tivity. Enter the
period (0 - 60
minutes) and
press OK .
0 deactivates the
auto-disconnect
function.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis­play.
Going online
To go online:
Press . Select Internet. Select Home page.
Connecting to followed by
your proxy name appears. Then the word Loading... (of the home page) appears.
Once connected, your provider spe­cific menu options appear. The icon indicates a 'live' circuit connec­tion. By default the connection is not secure. To have a secure connection, set ’Security on’. The icon indicates
48
a 'live' secure circuit connection.
12345
1212312
3
Using while online Press while online presents the following options:
Item Action
Back
Zoom +/-
Returns to the previous page
Increases or de­creases the dis­played text size
Add book-
marks
Go to
bookmarks
Reload
Home page
Other Site
Adds a current
card to the list of
bookmarks
Goes to a book-
mark
Reloads the cur-
rent page
Reloads the home
page
Enter a different
site
Disconnects the
Disconnect
browser from the
network but leaves the current page locally active
Close session
Disconnects the phone from the
internet
The appearance of these items de­pends on the operator and/or val­ues in the Settings menu.
Ending the online connection
To end the online connection:
Press .
You can also select Close session item under the options menu.
Creating bookmarks
To revisit specific cards more quick­ly, use bookmarks to store the card address. This function depends on your provider. You can create a maximum of 10bookmarks. Create bookmarks from the stand-by dis­play or while viewing a page.
Press . Select Internet. Select Bookmarks. Press Options , select Mod-
ify and enter the following:
Option Action
Alias
Address
Name you wish to give to your book-
mark
Home page address
Press OK to validate each entry.
Press and hold Exit or to return to the stand-by dis-
play. During a live connection while viewing page:
Press to display the
options menu.
Select Add bookmark, enter
the Alias name and press
OK .
Bookmarks can only be Edited or Deleted from the Bookmarks item under the Internet menu options while offline.
Using bookmarks
Bookmarks can be used from the stand-by display or while browsing.
• Directly from the stand-by dis­play:
Press . Select Internet. Select Bookmarks. Select the bookmark name
you require.
To access the Internet directly use the Internet soft­key (if not personalised).
• While browsing the internet:
Press to display the options menu.
Select Go to bookmarks. Select the bookmark name
you require.
Other site
You can enter another internet ad­dress directly by using the Other
The menu
49
site option from the Internet menu. Addresses are not stored and must be entered each time.
GSM man machine interface codes
The phone supports the standard GSM key sequences using the * and # characters sent directly from the keypad to the network. These se­quences are used to activate all the supplementary services provided by the network. Consult your service provider for a complete list.
50
Accessories
Using the headset
Connecting the headset
Insert the headset plug in the phone headset connector as shown:
While inserting the headset plug in the phone headset connector make sure the Trium logo ( ) appears on top. Otherwise the headset does not work properly.
Using the headset
Place the headset earpiece in your ear. The headset microphone is then at a convenient level for operation. You can answer, reject and end calls using or (see page 11). Adjust the earpiece volume level using or .
Earpiece
Microphone
Accessories
Disconnecting the headset
Tilt the headset plug down as shown:
51
Appendix
Glossary
Expression Meaning
AC/DC charger
Active call
ALS
AoC
CB Cell Broadcast
CLI
Conversation mode
DES
Diverting
DTC Desk Top Charger
EMS
DTMF
FDN Fixed Dialling Number
GSM
http
IN
IP Internet Protocol LCD Liquid Crystal Display MMI Man machine Interface
Alternating Current/Di­rect Current charger The call currently in con­versation Alternate Line (Line 2) Service Advise of Charge - sub­scription service
Caller Line Identity - dis­plays callers telephone number When the phone is mak­ing or receiving a call Data Encryption stand­ard Diverts incoming calls to the phone to another number
Enhanced Message Service Dual Tone Multifre­quency Tones
Global System for Mo­bile communications HyperText Transfer Pro­tocol Information Numbers of your operator
Expression Meaning
PIN/PIN2
PPP Point to Point Protocol
PUK/PUK2
Roaming (Rm)
SDN
SIM
SMS Short Message Service SPN Service Provider Name
SR
Stand-by mode
URL
WAE
WAP™
WSP
WTP
Personal Identification Number. Supplied by your network/service provider
PIN Unblocking Key. Used to unlock PIN and PIN2. Supplied by your network/service provid­er The ability to use your telephone at home or abroad. Service Dialling Number. Of your opera­tor or service provider Subscriber Identity Module. Supplied by your network/service provider
Status Report - relates to SMS messages When the phone is on, registered onto a net­work but not making or receiving a call Uniform Resource Loca­tor Wireless Application En­vironment Wireless Application Protocol Wireless Session Proto­col Wireless Transport Pro­tocol
52
Trouble shooting
Problem
Phone will not switch on
No flashing battery icon while charg­ing
Short stand­by and talk times
Numbers can­not be en­tered
Calls cannot be made or received
Possible cause and solu-
Check that the battery is fully charged and correctly connected to the phone. There may be no mains supply. Try a different elec­trical socket. The AC/DC charger may be faulty. Return to your deal­er and try substitution with another Mitsubishi adaptor. If faulty contact your dealer. Cell broadcast is perma­nently on, using more bat­tery power. Phone is in a poor signal area and therefore always on full power. Incorrect charging and dis­charging. Always charge and discharge your battery fully. The battery is wearing out. Replace the battery. Keypad lock is on ( ap­pears). Press Unlock and to turn off. Check at least one signal strength bar ( ) is dis­played. Try a stronger sig­nal strength area. If no network name is dis­played, check registration and area coverage with your service/network pro­vider and check the SIM is correctly inserted. Call barring option is on. Deactivate it (see page42). Call cost limit is reached (see page 31).
tion
Problem
Stored tele­phone num­bers cannot be recalled
Phone switches on but there is no display
Battery icon
not flash­ing 1-2-3 during charg­ing
Flashing
(......)
softkey
Possible cause and so-
lution
Fixed Dialled Number or Call Barring features are turned on. Check features and turn them off (see pages25 and42).
Display contrast is turned down too low. Reset con­trast (see page 34).
May indicate a charging or battery problem. Turn the charger off and dis­connect it. Reconnect and try again. May also indicate the bat­tery is full and does not need more charging.
There is not enough mem­ory to store another SMS message. You must delete one or more of the exist­ing stored messages (see page 26).
Function no longer availa­ble in the SIM or was sub­scription dependent. Reprogram the softkey (see page 34).
Appendix
53
Error messages
Problem
You are trying to place an outgoing call and the
Allowed cred­it reached!
Busy
Call failed
Cancelled. No type selected
allowed credit is already reached. The allowed credit limit is reached during an outgoing call (the call is then aborted).
You are trying to make a call and the call fails be­cause the destination number is already en­gaged in conversation.
The user is unreachable. The outgoing call fails due to: the network cannot take the call due to sys­tem busy or the number is out of or­der or the number is unreacha­ble or the network does not answer or the option to hide your phone number when calling is not supported by the network Control the ability to hide your ID when mak­ing a call (service availa­bility in network).
Cell broadcast activa­tion has been requested but no message type has been selected.
Possible cause and
solution
Problem
Cannot exe­cute com­mand
Can't display message
Check SIM!
Check your password
Check your request
Check your subscription
Error!
Failed
Incorrect en­try
Possible cause and
solution
You have made a re­quest which is impossi­ble to be executed in the current call situa­tion.
The short message text cannot be displayed (characters not recog­nised, incorrect format etc.)
There is no SIM present or the SIM is incorrectly inserted. See page 10 for more details.
You changed the call barring password or You changed the call barring service status. The entered password seems to be wrong or incorrect.
You made a request for a service that seems to be impossible to fulfil.
You tried to activate a GSM service. You are re­quested to check your subscription regarding the related service rights of use/access.
The network cannot perform your request and generates an error result.
An SMS sending process failed (the short mes­sage cannot be sent).
You entered a character string with a syntax er­ror.
54
Problem
Invalid number
Keypad locked "Unlock" # to unlock
Low battery!
Network busy
Network not allowed
New PIN in­correct. Try again
New PIN2 in­correct. Try again
Possible cause and
solution
You tried to make a call and the call is rejected by the network be­cause the network does not recognise the phone number struc­ture or you tried to store a phone number that is too long to be stored in the selected location or you tried to move a phone entry to a loca­tion that is unable to receive the phone number (phone number too long) A press on any key is made with keypad locked. This text appears when the battery becomes too low and the mobile soon switches off auto­matically. You tried to make a call. The call is rejected by the network due to congestion problems. When selecting net­work manual search, you have selected a network that rejects the connection. Changing PIN: the new PIN code values differ (value control). Changing PIN2: the new PIN2 code values differ (value control).
Problem
No action per­formed
No response
Not allowed
Not allowed (fixed dial­ling)
Not Available
Number changed
PIN blocked
PIN2 blocked
PUK2 blocked
Ring volume Off
Reaching al­lowed credit!
Possible cause and
solution
When a copy/move op­eration is made on memories but no con­ditions have been changed (same memo­ry, number and name). You made a call to a re­mote user and no re­sponse has been received. Your number/charac­ter entry is not allowed. A call is tried, but can­celled due to fixed dial­ling control (the number dialled does not match with one of the fixed dialling num­bers in memory). There is no more SIM storage. The called number has changed. A wrong PIN code has been entered 3 times. A wrong PIN2 code has been entered 3 times. A wrong PUK2 code has been entered 10 times. The SIM services pro­tected by the PIN2 code have now been perma­nently disabled. The ring volume is set to 0 (no volume) The cost limit is about to be reached. The con­nected call ends auto­matically when the limit is reached.
Appendix
55
Problem
Service not available
SIM blocked. Contact pro­vider
SIM blocked. Enter PUK:
SIM fixed full SIM names full Phone names full
SMS memory locations are full
Wrong code. Try again
Wrong new code. Try again
Wrong PIN, try again Wrong PIN2, try again Wrong PUK, try again Wrong PUK2, try again
Message not sent
Possible cause and
solution
Activating some GSM services that are not available on the net­work
A wrong PUK has been entered 10 times. The SIM card has been permanently disabled and needs to be re­placed by a new one.
A wrong PIN code has been entered 3 times. Enter the PUK code to unblock the SIM card.
The corresponding memory is full.
The storage of new messages (when writ­ing a new SMS) is im­possible.
A wrong phone lock code has been entered.
The new phone lock codes do not match (value control).
The wrong code has been entered.
The handset may be out of the network range or the network is temporarily overload­ed.
Problem
Internal fault
Invalid Serv­ice Menu
Registration required
Menu limit reached
Server limit reached
Possible cause and
solution
An unrecoverable error has occurred. Switch the handset off and back on again. It may be necessary to reset the EMS system (Set­tings menu). Beware: all services and EMS messages will then be erased.
An invalid service menu has been sent to the handset. The invalid service menu is ig­nored, no further ac­tion necessary.
You have not regis­tered to any service. Go to the Service registra­tion menu.
A new service menu item has been received but the remaining stor­age space is not suffi­cient to store it. Delete one or more registered menu items (My Servic­es menu) and accept the new menu or dis­card the new menu.
A new service has been received but the re­maining storage space is not sufficient to store it. Delete one or more registered service(s) ­Settings menu - and ac­cept the new service or discard the new serv­ice.
56
Guarantee
Pan European Service
Should you experience any difficulty then please contact your nearest MITSUBISHI location listed below for information on other service centres.
UNITED KINGDOM
Tel: (0800) 912 00 20
FRANCE
Tel: (0825) 86 82 83
DEUTSCHLAND
Tel: (01803) 33 71 84
BELGIUM
Tel: (0800) 75733
AUSTRIA
Tel: (0800) 292716
PORTUGAL
Tel: (0800) 880 264
THE NETHERLANDS
Tel: (0800) 0223825
ESPAÑA
Tel: (902) 11 68 58
ITALIA
Tel: (800) 27 59 02
IRELAND
Tel: (1800) 92 70 12
SWITZERLAND
Tel: 032 843 65 11
FINLAND
Tel: (0800) 116 975
SWEDEN
Tel: (0200) 214 715
To obtain Warranty Service, you will re­quire your original equipment purchase invoice or irrefutable proof of purchase. Please see warranty terms and conditions for in warranty service.
Pan-european GSM End-user Guar­antee Conditions
1.You can benefit from this guarantee only if you are the original end-user purchaser.
2.MITSUBISHI guarantees that for a period of twelve (12) months from the date of pur­chase from your dealer, the Product shall be free from defects in materials and work­manship. Subject to the conditions below, Mitsubishi will indemnify you against all cost of parts and labour for repairs to or re­placement of the product or parts (which may include equipment of similar type) where conducted by an authorised MIT­SUBISHI GSM service centre. MITSUBISHI shall be entitled to retain product which has been replaced.
3.Any claims must be made to an authorised MITSUBISHI GSM service centre in the countries mentioned in the service card en­closed with the product. In case of difficul­ty you can contact the Mitsubishi companies listed in the service card to ob­tain details of your nearest authorised MIT­SUBISHI GSM service centre. As a condition of this guarantee, the date of your pur­chase must be confirmed by producing your original invoice from your supplier or your sales receipt, showing the serial
number, together with the service card. Fi­nal determination of guarantee claim eligi­bility shall be made by MITSUBISHI. MITSUBISHI shall not be liable for ship­ment costs to and from an authorised GSM MITSUBISHI service centre; the product travels at your risk.
4.This guarantee does not cover: a)battery defects of any nature; b)non-compliance with directions for use; c)installation or removal charges where
the product is installed in a vehicle;
d)defects or failures caused by accident,
misuse, improper installation or improp­er repair by an unauthorized repairer, al­teration or modification, neglect, failure to use for normal purpose, Acts of God, water ingress, use in adverse environ­mental conditions (humidity or tempera­ture);
e)cost of or performance of modifications
to product to adapt or adjust to conform to national or local safety laws, where such safety laws go beyond harmonised European Union standards;
f)loss of use of the product or consequen-
tial loss of any nature;
g)loss of use of air-time, loss of use of any
loaned equipment or ancillary equip­ment;
h)provision of incorrect or insufficient sig-
nal on air-time network, upgrading of product software to changes in network operating parameters, mains supply voltage fluctuations, incorrect SIM card (memory card) parameters for connec­tion to airtime retailer;
i)damage caused by non-MITSUBISHI ac-
cessories.
5.Any guarantee claim or service does not extend the original guarantee period un­less so required by prevailing national law.
6.This guarantee is valid only if the product is purchased and used in the European Un­ion, Norway, Iceland or Switzerland.
THIS GUARANTEE DOES NOT AFFECT YOUR
STATUTORY RIGHTS.
Appendix
57
DECLARATION OF COMPLIANCE
Name : Mitsubishi Electric Telecom Europe S.A.
Address : 25, boulevard des Bouvets Town : Nanterre Cedex Postal code : 92741
Nature : Mobile Cell Telephone Type : Dual band GSM 900/DCS 1800 Sales reference : MT-360
Declares under its entire responsibility that the product described above complies with the following basic applicable requirements (and in particular those in the 1999/5/CE directive):
Article 3.1a: (health protection and user safety)
73/23/CEE, Cenelec EN 50361
Article 3.1b: (protection requirements concerning electromagnetic compatibility)
89/336/CEE, ETS 300 342-1
Article 3.2: (proper use of the radio-electric spectrum so as to avoid damaging interference)
EN 301 511
To this effect, declares that all the radio test series have been carried out.
RCS Nanterre B 307 593 129
Identification of the product
Declaration of compliance
9th of January 2002,
Viet Mailam
Managing Director
58
Index
A
Access to the menus ................. 20
Alarm
Clock .................................. 44
Alert mode ................................ 32
Alert tone
Turning on/off .................... 26
Any key answer ......................... 34
Auto
Answer ............................... 35
Retry .................................. 35
Auto-disconnect ........................ 48
Automatic ramping ................... 33
Automatic search ...................... 41
Auto-switch ............................... 45
B
Backlight ............................. 15, 34
Balance information .................. 30
Barring password
Call ..................................... 42
Basic operations
SMS ................................... 15
Unanswered call ................. 15
Voice mail .......................... 15
Battery ...................................... 10
Alarm volume .................... 33
Charging ............................ 12
Disposal ............................... 6
Fitting ................................ 12
Low battery warning .......... 12
Removing ........................... 12
Safety information ............... 6
Use ....................................... 6
Battery cover
Replacing ........................... 10
Bookmarks
Creating ............................. 49
Deleting ............................. 49
Using ................................. 49
Broadcast .................................. 43
Alert ................................... 44
Language ........................... 44
Message types ............. 43, 44
On/Off ................................ 43
C
Cache memory
Clearing .............................. 48
Calculator .................................. 45
Call
Conference ......................... 19
Duration ............................. 31
Holding .............................. 18
Multi-party ......................... 19
Reminder ........................... 31
Retrieving ........................... 18
Times ................................. 30
Waiting .............................. 18
Call barring ............................... 42
Password .............................. 7
Call costs
Reset .................................. 32
Call timer
Reset .................................. 31
Caller line identity ..................... 39
Calling ....................................... 11
Calls & Times ............................. 29
Call costs ...................... 31, 32
Call timers .................... 30, 31
Calls log ............................. 29
Costs .................................. 31
Line selection ..................... 32
Calls Log .................................... 29
Care and maintenance ................ 5
CB ............................................. 43
CB messages
Deleting ............................. 44
Editing ............................... 44
Reading .............................. 43
Cell broadcast ........................... 43
CLI ............................................. 39
Conference call .......................... 19
Connection profile ..................... 47
Cost management ..................... 31
Country Codes ........................... 16
Creating a draft text .................. 27
Credit limit ................................ 31
Currency-converter .................... 47
D
Date setting ............................... 37
Default settings ......................... 37
Dialling
Calls Log memory ............... 16
Phonebook ......................... 16
Dialling from memory ............... 16
Display contrast ......................... 34
Diverting ................................... 39
Draft text
Creating ............................. 27
Editing ............................... 27
DTMF tones ............................... 17
E
Emergency calls ........................... 5
EMS ........................................... 29
Ending a call .............................. 12
Error messages .......................... 54
F
FDN ........................................... 25
Fixed dialling numbers .............. 25
G
General
Safety ................................... 4
Getting started .......................... 10
Glossary ..................................... 52
GSM man machine
interface codes ...................... 50
GSM Services ............................. 38
Call barring .................. 42, 43
Call diverting ...................... 39
Network ....................... 40, 41
Receiving caller ID .............. 40
Sending my ID .................... 40
H
Handsfree features .................... 17
Headset
Use ..................................... 51
Holding a call ............................ 18
I
Incoming Calls
Diverting ............................ 39
International Country Codes ...... 16
Internet ............................... 15, 47
Bookmarks ......................... 49
Going online ...................... 48
Home page ........................ 48
Other site ........................... 49
Personalising ...................... 48
Profile list ........................... 48
Settings ........................ 47, 48
K
Keypad lock ......................... 15, 32
L
Language selection .................... 32
Last dialled numbers ................. 16
Line 1 ................ 25, 29, 30, 32, 39
Line 2 .......... 25, 29, 30, 32, 38, 39
Index
59
M
Making a call ............................. 11
Managing SMS messages .......... 26
Melodies ................................... 33
Melody download ..................... 38
Menu ........................................ 20
Access ................................ 20
Menu graphics .......................... 34
Menu map ................................ 20
Message templates ................... 28
Messages ............................ 15, 26
Alert ................................... 26
Draft texts .......................... 27
Inbox .................................. 26
Msg. Templates .................. 28
Outbox ............................... 28
Rich Messages .................... 29
Settings .............................. 26
Storage .............................. 29
Write new .................... 27, 28
Mobile number
Hiding ................................ 39
Showing ............................. 39
Multi-party call .......................... 19
Muting ...................................... 17
N
Network .................................... 40
Network services ....................... 22
O
Office Tools
Alarm clock ........................ 45
Scratchpad ......................... 44
Office tools ................................ 44
Online connection ..................... 48
Bookmarks ......................... 49
Ending ............................... 49
Personalising ...................... 48
Outbox ...................................... 28
Own number ............................. 25
P
Pause feature ............................ 18
Phone
Customising ....................... 32
Phone Book
Calling numbers ................. 24
Fixed Dialling ..................... 25
Free space .......................... 24
Own numbers .................... 25
Recall ................................. 24
Remaining .......................... 24
Store ............................ 23, 24
Viewing numbers ............... 24
Phone lock ................................ 36
Code .............................. 7, 36
Phone settings .......................... 32
Phonebook ................................ 22
PIN code .................................... 36
PIN/PIN2 codes ............................ 6
PIN2 code .................................. 36
Problems ....................... 54, 55, 56
Programmable
Softkeys ............................. 34
Speed dialling .................... 16
PUK code ................................... 37
PUK/PUK2 Codes ......................... 7
PUK2 code ................................. 37
R
Ramping .................................... 33
Reading an SMS message .... 26, 29
Receiving a call .......................... 12
Reminder - call time .................. 31
Responsibility .............................. 6
Retrieving a call ......................... 18
Ring ........................................... 33
Ring tone .................................. 33
S
Safety information ...................... 4
Battery ................................. 6
Care and maintenance ......... 4
Emergency calls .................... 4
Responsibility ....................... 4
Security codes ...................... 4
Vehicle safety ....................... 4
Scratchpad ................................ 44
Scripting .................................... 48
Second call ................................ 19
Security ..................................... 35
Codes ................................... 6
Features ............................. 35
Sending an SMS message .......... 27
Settings ..................................... 32
Auto features ..................... 35
Broadcast ..................... 43, 44
Default settings .................. 37
Display ............................... 34
GSM Services 39, 40, 41, 42, 43
Internet .............................. 47
Keypad lock ........................ 15
Keys ............................. 34, 35
Language ........................... 32
Menu graphics ................... 34
Phone settings ....... 15, 32, 33
Security ........................ 36, 37
Time & date ........................ 37
Tones ..................... 32, 33, 34
Voice Mail .......................... 38
Show costs ................................ 32
Silent ......................................... 33
Silent alert mode ....................... 17
SIM
Card ................................... 10
SIM card .................................... 14
SMS ..................................... 15, 26
SMS messages
Managing .......................... 26
Preparing your phone ........ 26
Reading ........................ 26, 29
Sending .............................. 27
Storing ............................... 28
Softkey programming ............... 34
Solutions ................. 53, 54, 55, 56
Speed dialling ...................... 16, 35
Standby display ......................... 11
Storage consumption ................ 29
Storing an SMS message ........... 28
Storing names and numbers ..... 22
34, 35, 36, 37
T
T9 .............................................. 20
T9 text entry .............................. 21
Time & date ............................... 37
Time settings ............................. 37
Trouble shooting ....................... 53
Turning
Off ..................................... 12
On ...................................... 10
V
Vehicle safety .............................. 4
Vibrate ...................................... 33
Vibrate & ring ............................ 33
Vibrate alert modes ................... 17
Vibrate then ring ....................... 33
Voice Mail
Alert ................................... 38
Call ..................................... 38
Number .............................. 38
Voice mail ................................. 38
Volume ...................................... 17
Adjustment ........................ 17
Alert mode ......................... 33
Conversation ...................... 33
Keys tones .......................... 33
Ring tone ........................... 33
W
WAP™ ....................................... 47
60
Austria
0800 292716
Belgium
0800 75733
Denmark
8088 1816
Finland
0800 116975
France
0800 913080
Germany
0800 1808133
Greece
00800 44131247
Ireland
1800 927012
Italy
800 791029
Luxembourg
800 23 552
www.mitsubishi-telecom.com
Netherlands
0800 0223825
Portugal
0800 880264
Spain
9009 34497
Sweden
0200 214715
UK
0800 9120020
FA9M078910-A
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