Nokia 3125 Cell Phone User Manual


 
Copyright © 2004 Nokia. All rights reserved. 19
Messages (Menu 1)
View saved messages
1. At the standby mode, select
Menu > Messages > Text
messages.
2. After a brief pause, scroll to the
folder containing the message
you wish to view and press
Select.
3. Once the folder opens, scroll to
the message you wish to view,
and press Select.
Multimedia messages
A multimedia message (MMS) is a
network service. If your wireless
service provider supports this
feature, then an MMS can be
created in SMIL presentation format.
SMIL presentation format means
that each MMS can hold up to 30
slides, each containing 1 image, 1
sound clip, and text, or a single slide
that contains video and text only. If
supported by your wireless service
provider, you may also be able to
receive business cards and calendar
notes. Maximum MMS size is
reached at 100 KB. If the maximum
size is exceeded, the phone may not
be able to send or receive the
message. Once you save the MMS,
you can play back the video clip, use
the image as a screen saver, or use
the sound as a ringing tone. In some
networks, you may receive a
message that includes an internet
address where you can view the
multimedia message.
Note: Only devices that offer
compatible multimedia
message or e-mail features
can receive and display
multimedia messages.
Multimedia message objects
may contain viruses or
otherwise be harmful to your
device or PC. Do not open any
attachment if you are not
sure of the trustworthiness of
the sender.
Note: When your phone is
dedicated to a call in
progress, an application
(such as a game), or an active
web browser connection, the
phone cannot receive
multimedia messages.
The default setting of the
multimedia message service is
generally on.
Multimedia messaging supports
JPEG, GIF, PNG, AGIF, OTA-BMP and
WBMP picture formats, MIDI and
SP-MIDI and monophonic ringing
tones, QCELP and AMR audio
encoders and decoders, and H.263
video format.
The appearance of a multimedia
message may vary depending on the
receiving device.
Copyright protections may prevent
some images, ringing tones, and