Nokia 6820i Cell Phone User Manual


 
38 Copyright © 2004 Nokia
Select each of the settings one by one, and key in all the required settings. Contact your
service provider for the settings.
Allow advertisements—to receive or reject advertisements. The setting is not shown if
Allow multimedia reception is set to No.
E-MAIL SETTINGS
You may receive the e-mail connection settings as an OTA message from the service
provider. For receiving the settings over the air, see “Over-the-air settings service” on page 19.
For keying in the settings manually, select Menu > Messages > Message settings >
E-mail messages > Active e-mail settings.
You must first activate a mailbox. Select Mailbox in use, and activate the mailbox for which
you want to save the settings. Select Activate > Edit active e-mail settings, and edit
the settings.
Select each of the settings one by one, and key in all that are required. Contact your e-mail
service provider for the settings.
Mailbox name—key in the name that you want to use for the mailbox.
E-mail address—key in your e-mail address.
My name—key in your name or nickname if you want the recipient to see it.
Outgoing (SMTP) server—key in the address of the e-mail server.
Incoming server type > POP3 or IMAP4—if both types are supported, select IMAP4.
Changing the server type also changes the incoming port number.
Incoming (POP3/IMAP4) server—key in the e-mail server address for incoming e-mail
(either POP3 or IMAP4).
POP3/IMAP4 user name—key in the user name to access the mailbox. If you have not
defined your SMTP user name, the e-mail server uses this user name instead.
POP3/IMAP4 password—key in the password to access the mailbox. If you have not defined
your SMTP password, the e-mail server uses POP3/IMAP4 password instead.
Other settings—contains additional settings.
FONT SIZE SETTING
To select the font size for reading and writing messages, select Menu > Messages >
Message settings > Other settings > Font size.
SERVICE COMMANDS
Select Menu > Messages > Service commands. Key in and send service requests (also
known as USSD commands), such as activation commands for network services, to your
service provider.