PDA

View Full Version : Blackberry 8703e



LA_MERC_Wetzny
February 25th, 2007, 09:44 AM
My wife has been issued a Blackberry 8703e, and is interested in knowing more about how to operate one without having to ask the IT guys, who spew fancy techno-babble at her while staring at her ample bosom. :)

So I suggested I could find some easy to understand hints, tips and suggestions from my friends while not directly exposing her to hyper-technical terms like browser, keypad and password.


Marietta is a smart woman, but can be easily flustered by technological devices, like the TV remote. So if it's possible could someone provide me with a few simple suggestions for the most effective use of her device? An easy setup and activation and any add-ons to make the use of it easy as say.. shopping for shoes or getting your nails done?

She wants to use it as a phone, and to retrieve e-mail from her workstation and personal home e-mail account. There will be some web page access needed, but not much.

Now I could do this for her, but what good is that? Then it's just one mildly technologically-retarded person working for another. So I thought I would ask you the experts for a few simple thoughts and pass them on to by beautiful wife.

Thank you in advance!

LA_MERC_LaTech
February 25th, 2007, 10:00 AM
These are the ones that I've been deploying lately. What sort of system is she attached to? Does she connect to a Blackberry Enterprise server where she works? If so, she'll have to have the geeks there set up a password to activate it so that it'll connect to the server to DL her email. Internet should be fairly straight forward, assuming she has that feature enables on her device. Did she get tethering also?

Need more info

LA_MERC_Wetzny
February 25th, 2007, 10:11 AM
She works at Bank of America, so yes there is a BES. Yes she has tethering. When you ask what system is she attached to, what do you mean?

Thanks

LA_MERC_LaTech
February 25th, 2007, 10:13 AM
Groupwise/Exchange....

If she has a BES, and if the device isn't activated yet, she'll have to have it activated by one of the geeky folks. They'll have the server generate a password, then she'll go to activate it by putting in her work email and the password they generated for her. Then you get email etc.

LA_MERC_Wetzny
February 25th, 2007, 10:19 AM
OK, Ty. Once that occurs then what is next? How will we set up a home account for her? or should we? Now I'm finding out SHE bought the Blackberry (I have a Brother in law at Sprint, he got it for her for 100 bucks.) does this change anything? How do we activate the phone?

LA_MERC_LaTech
February 25th, 2007, 11:02 AM
If she has an existing phone, just call up Sprint and tell them that you want to switch your existing cell over to the blackberry. She MAY lose her present cell number (I've had to argue with the Verizon guys to get to keep the cell number and just add Data to it), but maybe not.

Once she has the phone part activated (do that part FIRST), then have her tell the geek sat work to send her an activiation. Hopefully they will (you're charged basedon how many users you have for BES). Then, activate it.

As for home emails, I don't know for sure. If it's through the web, I would do it that way (much easier). Besides, I don't know if you can add a POP email account to the BB device or not (never tried it).

LA_MERC_Wetzny
February 25th, 2007, 11:06 AM
Ty, should I have her take her current phone to a Sprint store with the BB and have all the numbers switched over and the BB activated?

LA_MERC_LaTech
February 25th, 2007, 12:20 PM
Yeah, that would be the easiest thing to do.

LA_MERC_T4rg3T
February 25th, 2007, 11:32 PM
Keep in mind that the Blackberry has needs a phone plan and a data plan. You will not only need to transfer the phone plan from her old phone to the BB but also add the data plan.

Also, most all blackberries come with email service through blackberry when purchased. You just need to set them up. For sprint, it would be something to the affect of [email protected]


Sprint Blackberry Email Setup User Guide
http://www.sprint.com/cdma/assets/pdfs/phone_guides/blackberry/8703e_email_setup_ug.pdf


Blackberry 8703e Manual
http://www.blackberry.com/knowledgecenterpublic/livelink.exe/fetch/2000/8067/645045/8533/1271687/1271651/BlackBerry_8703e_-_User_Guide.pdf?nodeid=1271688&vernum=0



BlackBerry Tips, Tricks, and Keypress Shortcuts


Important Keys

ALT key = has half moon on top of it. left side of keyboard below the A.
CAP key = bottom right key (AKA SHIFT key)



In General
Hold the ALT key while you roll the thumb-wheel to scroll horizontally in any field where you can enter or view text.

Hold the ALT key while you roll the thumb-wheel to scroll through a field to view options.

Hold the CAP key while you roll the thumb-wheel to select multiple items in a list.

ALT +Escape - Allows multitasking, brings up Taskbar on any screen. Similiar to Windows ALT+TAB

ALT + CAP - Turns on CAPS lock. Hold ALT first then press CAP . An oval with an up arrow shows up in the upper right corner of the screen.

CAP + ALT - Turns on NUM lock. Hold CAP first then press ALT . A # sign shows up in the oval in the upper right corner of the screen)

Type the first letter of an item in an options list or menu to jump directly to that item.

Type the first letters of a name or the initials separated by a SPACEBAR to find a contact in the Address Book screen.

Press C to compose a new message from the home screen or within Messages. (If this does not work, make sure Phone->Options->"Dial From Home Screen" is turned off. This re-enables keypress shortcuts for icons from the home screen.)

Press ALT + ENTER to keylock your BlackBerry quickly from the home screen. (Alternate keypress is just press K, but this only works if "Dial From Home Screen" is disabled)

Rearrange the ribbon: In the Home screen (ribbon), hold the ALT key and click the thumb-wheel to bring up a menu. You can then select Move Icon, Hide Icon, or Show All. If you hide an icon, to show it again click Show all and it will appear with an X over it, bring up the menu on it and uncheck hide icon.

The Blackberry display can be backlit to allow reading messages in the dark. To get the light to come on, hit the backlight button usually in the lower right of the keyboard. Hopefully you have a backlit keyboard as well so you can type in the dark.

Turning the radio off and back on when coverage is spotty and you've lost signal seems to help. Also going into network and selecting register now will help. And if you have a phone/combo BB then on some you can go into network and select Scan for networks. then select the network you are on, for example T-mobile, then save. After doing this the radio will reset and you may receive a register message and a new service book, which you can accept from the service book menu in options.

Password protect your BB. To set a password, go to the Options menu to the Security item. Set the desired timeout (I use 15 minutes) and enable/set a password. In conjunction with this, you should also go to the Options menu to the Owner item, and enter your name, phone number, etc. When the password protection kicks in, this is what is displayed on the screen.

After five incorrect attempts at typing in your password, the password starts echoing (figuring you really need all the help you can get). After ten attempts, it performs a lobotomy on itself and almost all data is cleared. The Memo database, however, is retained and visible.

To support more than one signature. Wipe out your auto-signature in the Redirector of the Desktop Software and just use 'AutoText' to configure alternate sigs.


In the Message List

(Some of these work in tasks, memos, and appointments also)

Sorting:
ALT +I - show only incoming mail
ALT +O - show only outgoing mail (messages you have sent - i.e. checkmark icon)
ALT +P - show phone log messages
ALT +S - show SMS messages
ALT +V - show VoiceMail messages

Navigating:
T - go to top of message listing
B - go to end/bottom of message listing
DEL - close message listing and return to home screen (ribbon)
SPACEBAR - pagedown
CAP + SPACEBAR - pageup

Deleting multiple messages at once:
Highlight a date (i.e. Fri, Oct 05,2001) in the message list, hit the thumb-wheel and select delete prior. All messages prior to that date will be deleted.

Hold down the CAP key and use the thumb-wheel to scroll up or down to select messages. Click the thumb-wheel and select 'Delete Messages'. Combine this with a sorting tip to make it even more useful (i.e. To delete the last 5 messages that you have sent (checkmarks), press ALT then the letter 'O' (for outgoing) this will show all of your sent messages, then per this tip scroll down and select the last five.


While In A Message

Navigating:
ENTER or SPACEBAR - scroll down a page/screen at a time
ALT + ENTER or ALT + SPACEBAR - scroll back a page/screen at a time
B - scroll to end of page
T - scroll to top of page
U - jump to closest unread message
N - jump to next message
P - jump to previous message
DEL - close message and return to message listing

Reply-to/Forward:
R - reply to or answer this message
F - forward this message

Select Text (OS v2.1+):
Press the CAP key and then scroll the thumb-wheel to select. If you release the CAP key and scroll the thumb-wheel you will select entire lines. Press the CAP key again at any time to start selecting by character again.

Hold down ALT key + CLICK the thumb-wheel (click it don't hold it down), release the thumb-wheel and then use it to scroll whole lines. You can press and hold the ALT key at anytime to start selecting by character again.

Click scroll wheel and select SELECT from the menu. scroll wheel to select entire line. click scroll wheel again and select copy.
With either method, click the thumb-wheel and select 'Cut Selection' or 'Copy Selection'... to paste, open a new message or whatever, click the thumb-wheel, and then select 'Paste Selection'.



Composing Message
Press and hold a letter to capitalize it (with Key Rate enabled).

Press the SPACEBAR key twice to insert a period and capitalize the next letter.

Press the SPACEBAR key to insert the "@" and "." characters in an Email field. Backspace and type again to over-ride this like you would with AutoText.

Press and hold a letter key and roll the thumb-wheel to scroll through international/accent characters, equation symbols and other marks.

Calendar (from Agenda screen)
Press T to go to "Today" in the Calendar screen.
Press G to go to a specific date in the Calendar screen.

The default date range for Calendar synchronization in Desktop Manager may not suit most people. While configuring the Calendar synchronization, click the Advanced button and specify the desired range.

Battery
The largest draw on battery life is the transmitter, so if you are transmitting a lot, you can expect reduced battery life. And the backlight.

Being in fringe or no coverage areas will eat up your battery as it attempts to transmit. If you're in an area that is out of range, turn your BB's radio off manually or use Options / Auto On Off to conserve battery life.


Geek Tips
Rather than looking at the bars, you can change the display of the 'signal strength' to read in real numbers.
While at the home screen (ribbon), hold down the half moon ALT key while you type NMLL. The bars should change to read numbers. For the 'signal strength', if you are in the 100 area (that means -100 dBm), you will be transmitting at maximum power (2 Watts), and since coverage is hit and miss at this weak a signal, you may end up transmitting many times before the packets make it through. This might help explain any poorer than normal battery life. I consider anything at -90 to -50 excellent.

To get the bars back: While at the home screen (ribbon), hold down the half moon ALT key while you type NMLL again.

Hold down the half moon ALT key -AND- the CAP key at the same time, then the letter 'H'. This brings up the "Help Me!" screen that lists version, app version, pin, imei, uptime, signal strength, batterylevel, file free, and file total.

Hold down the half moon ALT while you type LGLG. This brings up the event log where you can clear events (frees some memory) or view them or copy the contents to mail to someone.

ALT + CAP + DEL will reboot your BB.

If you would like to have delivery confirmation for your regular outgoing emails on your BlackBerry, add "<confirm>" to the beginning of your subject line. You must include the brackets. You will get an email back confirming delivery of your message.


Other Tips

A user by the name of Sanderson on the Rim Road forums added:
Instead of having your one auto sig set up for you, try this for multiple sigs:
1. Delete your existing auto sig.
2. Make an autotext entry where:
when I type: zz (or any irregular 2 letter combo like zx)
replace it with:
Your Name
Your Company
Your phone extension etc.
autotext entries can really hold a lot. give it a try..I have zz as my "professional" signature and xc as my "casual" sign off.
once you get used to it, you don't even notice that you're entering 2 extra letters @ the end of a message



Final Note

You can find more general usage tips in the User's Guide.

Chi_Townz
February 26th, 2007, 06:10 AM
Wetz, my advice.... Dont let her turn it on.

They dont call it CrackBerry for nothin.

They say its the best way to stay connected. What they dont tell you is its on 24/7 and the user feels compelled too use it 24/7.

Beware the CrackBerry!

LA_MERC_th33_r00k
February 26th, 2007, 08:13 AM
Wetz, my advice.... Dont let her turn it on.

They dont call it CrackBerry for nothin.

They say its the best way to stay connected. What they dont tell you is its on 24/7 and the user feels compelled too use it 24/7.

Beware the CrackBerry!

Kinda like some of you guys and BF2?......:stick

LA_MERC_Wetzny
February 26th, 2007, 08:41 AM
You got that right... I'm a BF2 addict, no doubt.

Chi_Townz
February 27th, 2007, 06:21 AM
Kinda like some of you guys and BF2?......:stick
Some...

Chi_Townz
February 27th, 2007, 03:49 PM
This is awsome...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GdzUZDDi5aM

42d3e78f26a4b20d412==