Nokia E51 Cell Phone User Manual


 
To set a new lock code, select Phone and SIM card > Lock code. The preset
lock code is 12345. Enter the current code and then the new code twice. The
new code can be 4-255 characters long. Both alphabets and digits can be
used, and both uppercase and lowercase alphabets are possible. The device
notifies you if the lock code is not properly formatted.
To set the device to ask for the lock code when an unknown, new SIM card
is inserted into your device, select Phone and SIM card > Lock if SIM card
changed. The device maintains a list of SIM cards that are recognised as the
owners cards.
Restore original settings
To restore the original device settings, select Factory settings. To do this,
you need your device lock code. After resetting, the device may take a longer
time to power on. Documents, contact information, calendar entries, and
files are unaffected.
Telephone settings
Select Menu > Tools > Settings > Phone.
Select from the following:
Call — Define general call settings.
Call divert — Define your call forwarding settings. {unresolved reference
to ID 'GUID-E1C8054D-EA6B-4DC1-8DA7-582E05DFF482'}
Call barring — Define your call restriction settings. {unresolved reference
to ID 'GUID-BEC096F2-A1BC-461E-AA52-51038F621CE7'}
Network — Adjust the network settings.
Call settings
To display your phone number to the person you are calling, select Call >
Send my caller ID > Yes. To let the network determine whether your caller
ID is sent, select Set by network.
To display your net call address to the person you are calling using a net call,
select Call > Send my internet call ID > Yes.
To be notified of a new incoming call while you have a call in progress, select
Call > Call waiting > Options > Activate. To check if the function is active
on the network, select Options > Check status.
To select whether net calls alert or not, select Call > Internet call alert. You
are notified of missed net calls with a notification.
To set the default call type, select Call > Default call type and select Voice
call if you make a GSM calls, or Internet call if you make net calls.
To send a text message automatically to the person who is calling you
informing why you cannot answer the incoming call, select Call > Reject
call with SMS > Yes. To set the text for the message, select Call > Message
text.
Network settings
Select Menu > Tools > Settings > Phone > Network.
To select the network mode, select Network mode and Dual mode,
UMTS, or GSM. In the dual mode, the device switches automatically between
networks.
To select the operator, select Operator selection and Manual to choose
from available networks, or Automatic to have the device select the network
automatically.
To set the device to indicate when it is used in Micro Cellular Network (MCN),
select Cell info display > On.
Connection settings
Select Menu > Tools > Settings > Connection.
Select from the following:
Bluetooth — Edit the Bluetooth settings.
See "Send and receive data with
Bluetooth," p. 33.
USB — Edit the data cable settings.
See "Data cable," p. 33.
Access points — Set up new or edit existing access points. Some or all
access points may be preset for your device by your service provider, and
you may not be able to create, edit, or remove them.
Packet data — Determine when packet data connections are used, and
enter the access point if you use your device as a modem for a computer.
Wireless LAN — Determine if the device displays an indicator when a
WLAN is available, and how often the device searches for networks.
SIP settings — View or create session initiation protocol (SIP) profiles.
Internet tel. — Define settings for net calls.
Configurations — View and delete trusted servers from which your
device may receive configuration settings.
APN control — Restrict packet data connections.
See "Restrict packet
data," p. 42.
Access points
Select Menu > Tools > Settings > Connection > Access points.
An internet access point is a collection of settings, which define how the
device creates a data connection to the network. To use e-mail and
multimedia services or to browse web pages, you must first define access
points for these services.
Some or all access points may be preset for your device by your service
provider, and you may not be able to create, edit, or remove them.
To create a new access point, select Options > New access point or select
an existing access point from the list and then Options > Duplicate access
point to use the access point as a basis for the new one.
Packet data (GPRS) settings
Select Menu > Tools > Settings > Connection > Packet data.
Your device supports packet data connections, such as GPRS in the GSM
network. When you are using your device in GSM and UMTS networks, it is
possible to have multiple data connections active at the same time; access
points can share a data connection, and data connections remain active, for
example, during voice calls.
See "Connection manager," p. 35.
To define the packet data settings, select Packet data connection and select
When available to register the device to the packet data network when you
switch the device on in a supported network, or When needed to establish
a packet data connection only when an application or action requires it.
Select Access point and enter the access point name provided by your service
provider to use the device as a packet data modem to your computer.
These settings affect all access points for packet data connections.
WLAN settings
Select Menu > Tools > Settings > Connection > Wireless LAN.
To have an indicator displayed when there is a WLAN available in your current
location, select Show WLAN availability > Yes.
To select the interval for your device to scan for available WLANs and update
the indicator, select Scan for networks. This setting is not available unless
you select Show WLAN availability > Yes.
Advanced WLAN settings
Select Options > Advanced settings. The advanced WLAN settings are
normally defined automatically, and changing them is not recommended.
To edit the settings manually, select Automatic configuration >
Disabled, and define the following:
Long retry limit — Enter the maximum number of transmission attempts
if the device does not receive a receiving acknowledgement signal from
the network.
Short retry limit — Enter the maximum number of transmission
attempts if the device does not receive a clear-to-send signal from the
network.
RTS threshold — Select the data packet size at which the WLAN access
point device issues a request to send before sending the packet.
TX power level — Select the power level of your device when sending
data.
Radio measurements — Enable or disable the radio measurements.
Power saving — Select whether to use the WLAN power saving
mechanism to save the power in the device battery. Using the power
saving mechanism enhances the battery performance but may weaken
WLAN interoperability.
To restore all settings to their original values, select Options > Restore
defaults.
WLAN security settings
Select Menu > Tools > Settings > Connection > Access points >
Options > New access point, or select an access point and Options >
Edit.
In the access point settings, select WLAN security mode and the desired
mode.
WEP security settings
Select WEP as the WLAN security mode.
The wired equivalent privacy (WEP) encryption method encrypts data before
it is transmitted. Access to the network is denied to users who do not have
the required WEP keys. When the WEP security mode is in use, and your
device receives a data packet not encrypted with the WEP keys, the data is
discarded.
In an ad-hoc network, all devices must use the same WEP key.
Select WLAN security settings and from the following:
WEP key in use — Select the desired WEP key.
Authentication type — Select Open or Shared.
WEP key settings — Edit the settings for the WEP key.
WEP key settings
In an ad-hoc network, all devices must use the same WEP key.
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