Nokia 6630

Page 46
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Messaging
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Copyright © 2005 Nokia. All rights reserved. 
report of a multimedia message that has been sent to an e-mail address might not be 
possible.
• To enter and send service requests (also known as USSD commands), such as activation 
commands for network services, to your service provider, select 
Messaging
→ 
Options
→ 
Service command
 in the main view of Messaging.
 Options in Cell 
broadcast: 
Open
Subscribe
 /
Unsubscribe
Hotmark
 / 
Remove 
hotmark
Topic
Settings
Help
, and 
Exit
.
• Cell broadcast is a network service that allows you to receive messages on various 
topics, such as weather or traffic conditions from your service provider. For available 
topics and relevant topic numbers, contact your service provider. In the main view of 
Messaging, select 
Options
→ 
Cell broadcast
. In the main view you can see the status 
of a topic, a topic number, name, and whether it has been flagged (
) for follow-up.
Cell broadcast messages cannot be received in UMTS networks. A packet data 
connection may prevent cell broadcast reception.
Writing text
Traditional text input
Icons: 
 and 
 indicate the 
selected case. 
 
means that the first letter 
of the word, is written in 
upper case, and all the 
other letters will 
automatically be written 
in lower case. 
 
indicates number mode.
The indicator 
 is shown on the top right of the display when you are writing text 
using traditional text input.
• Press a number key (
 - 
) repeatedly until the desired character appears. 
There are more characters available for a number key than are printed on the key.
• To insert a number, press and hold the number key. 
• To switch between letter and number mode, press and hold 
.
• If the next letter is located on the same key as the present one, wait until the cursor 
appears (or press 
 to end the time-out period), and enter the letter.
• To erase a character, press 
. Press and hold 
 to clear more than one character.
• The most common punctuation marks are available under 
. Press 
 
repeatedly to reach the desired punctuation mark.
R0915_en.book  Page 46  Tuesday, February 8, 2005  11:46 AM