Radio Shack Electronic Organizer Owner's Manual

Radio Shack Electronic Organizer Owner's Manual

Electronic organizer

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Electronic Organizer

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Summary of Contents for Radio Shack Electronic Organizer

  • Page 1 Electronic Organizer...
  • Page 2: Table Of Contents

    Contents Features ................. 4 A Quick Look at the Organizer ..........5 Operation ................7 Removing the Insulation Strip .......... 7 Turning the Organizer On and Off ........7 Turning the Key Tone On and Off ........7 Selecting a Language ............7 Checking Free Memory ...........
  • Page 3 Using Conversions ............26 Setting Exchange Rates ......... 26 Calculating a Conversion ........27 Using the Calculator ............28 Memory Calculations ..........28 Percentage Calculations ........29 Constant Calculations ..........29 Reciprocal Calculations .......... 30 Exponent Calculations ..........30 Square Root Calculations ........30 Care and Maintenance ............
  • Page 4: Features

    Features Your RadioShack Electronic Organizer is a pocket-size data or- ganizer. It’s great for the person on the go, combining functions including two telephone directories, daily alarm, schedule alarms, a calculator, and more in an easy-to-use package. 2K Memory — gives you ample space for storing phone num- bers, e-mail addresses, schedules and memos.
  • Page 5: A Quick Look At The Organizer

    A Quick Look at the Organizer 3-Row Display — lets view up to three rows of data at once. ¥ — turns hourly Numeric chime on and Keypad — off. lets you per- form calcula- tions AM/PM — type digits. toggles tween AM and PM time.
  • Page 6 Memory Keys — let you easily M . CK — checks free memory. perform multi-step calculations. LANGUAGE — lets you select the display lan- guage. — switches between standard and Day- light Sav- ing Time. £ BUSINESS/ — helps you organize business phone directory records and general information about contacts.
  • Page 7: Operation

    Operation REMOVING THE INSULATION STRIP Your organizer comes with an insulation strip that helps pre- serve battery power during shipping. Before using the organizer, remove the insulation strip from the battery compartment (located in the back of the organizer) by grasping and pulling it away from the organizer.
  • Page 8: Checking Free Memory

    ­ 1. Press to enter home time mode. appears TIME/ before the city code. ;D=B?I>5 2. Press appears. L/LANGUAGE ® ¯ 3. Repeatedly press to select the SEARCH SEARCH desired language. 4. Press to store the setting. The language you ENTER(=) ;D=B?I>...
  • Page 9 City Code City Code London Sydney Paris Noumea Cairo Wellington Moscow Tonga Islands J>H Tehran Midway >DB Dubai Honolulu Kabul Anchorage A>? Karachi Los Angeles Delhi Denver 9>? Dhaka Chicago Rangoon New York Bangkok Caracas >A= Hong Rio De Janeiro Kong #(>...
  • Page 10 ® ¯ 3. Repeatedly press to select the SEARCH SEARCH OO#CC#:: ::#CC#OO date display format you want ( , or CC#::#OO 4. Press to store the setting. The organizer returns ENTER(=) to the home time mode. 5. Repeatedly press to turn Daylight Saving Time on or D/DST ¦...
  • Page 11: Viewing World Times

    you press . Then, the original home city code and ENTER(=) date and time appear, and a flashing cursor appears on the first character of the city code. Re-enter the correct date and time then press ENTER(=) • You can set the organizer so it displays time in either 12- or ­...
  • Page 12 £ ¬ 1. Press to enter the busi- BUSINESS/ PERSONAL/ 8KI?D;II5 F;H# ness or personal phone directory mode. IED7B5 appears. 2. Enter the contact’s name (up to 45 characters). Notes: • Since the organizer stores phone directory records alphabetically by name, you might want to enter last names first.
  • Page 13 7. Press appears on the top of the display, /NEXT . <7N5 appears on the first row of the display and the work phone number appears on the second row of the display. Note: If you did not enter a work phone number, the sec- ond row remains blank and a flashing cursor appears in the third row of the display.
  • Page 14: Entering A Schedule Alarm Record

    16. Repeat Steps 2–15 to enter another phone directory ­ record. Or, press to return to the home time mode. TIME/ Notes: • If the organizer is in the business phone directory mode, appears on the top of the display. Otherwise, (personal phone directory mode) appears.
  • Page 15 portant events. You can store up to 46 schedule alarm records (32 characters in each record). ¢ I9>;:# 1. Press to enter the schedule alarm mode. SCHED/ KB;5 appears. 2. Enter the message you want to appear when the alarm sounds.
  • Page 16 3. Press . The date display’s first digit flashes. /NEXT . 4. Enter the date and time of the schedule alarm. IJEH; I9>;:KB;5 5. Press briefly appears. Then ENTER(=) appears. Note: If the information you enter is invalid (for example, I;J;HHEH you enter 20 for the month), briefly appears after...
  • Page 17: Entering A Memo Record

    • If the alarm sounds and the alarm message appears while you are entering information, the information you are enter- ing might not be stored. ENTERING A MEMO RECORD You can use the memo function to record a note or reminder so you can refer to it later.
  • Page 18: Working With Records

    Notes: • If the organizer is in the business phone directory mode, appears on the top of the display. Otherwise, (personal phone directory mode) appears. • You do not have to enter information in every field. To skip a field, repeatedly press , and /NEXT /DEL...
  • Page 19: Recalling A Record

    Recalling a Record £ 1. Press the desired mode key ( , for example). BUSINESS/  ® ¯ 2. Repeatedly press to view the SEARCH SEARCH records in alphabetical order. You can also enter the first few characters of the record you want to find, then press  ®...
  • Page 20: Editing A Record

    Editing a Record 1. Recall the record you want to edit (see “Recalling a Record” on Page 19). 2. Press then pres s A flashing cursor SHIFT /DEL / INS. appears on the first character of the record. 3. Repeatedly press , and /NEXT /DEL...
  • Page 21: Using The Daily Alarm

    :;B;J;5 2. Press appears. C/CE If you are sure you want to delete the record, press :;B;J; briefly appears when the organizer ENTER(=) deletes the record, then a mode prompt message (for F;HIED7B5 example, ) appears. Otherwise, press any key except .
  • Page 22: Setting The Hourly Chime

    § 7B7HCI;J 7'( 2. Press to set the daily alarm. /T.SET ¶&& &&¶&& (in 12-hour time format) or (in 24-hour time for- mat) appear. The first digit of the hour flashes. 3. Enter the alarm time. Then press to store the set- ENTER(=) ¥...
  • Page 23: Using Secret Records

    USING SECRET RECORDS The organizer lets you block access to certain records that you enter in the secret area. Once you set a password of up to 6 characters, business and personal phone directory records, schedule alarm records, and memo records in the secret area are locked until you enter the password.
  • Page 24: Entering A Secret Record

    Entering a Secret Record You can enter secret records in business and personal phone directory, schedule, and memo modes after you set the pass- word. £ ¬ ¢ 1. Press , or BUSINESS/ PERSONAL/ SCHED/ MEMO/ ª to enter the open area in the business or personal phone directory, schedule alarm, or memo mode.
  • Page 25: Changing The Password

    § « F7IIMEH:5 2. Press appear. /T.SET § 8KI?D;II5 F;H# 3. Enter the password then press /T.SET IED7B5 I9>;:KB;5 C;CE5 , or appears. EF;D;HHEH Note: If the password you entered is incorrect, briefly appears and the organizer exits the secret area. 8KI?D;II5 F;HIED7B5 I9>;:KB;5...
  • Page 26: Using Conversions

    USING CONVERSIONS The organizer’s conversion function lets you perform metric and currency conversions. The following conversion rates are pre- set in your organizer: Conversion Rate Inch → Centimeter 2.54 Yard → Meter 0.9144 Mile → Kilometer 1.609 C° → F° Foot →...
  • Page 27: Calculating A Conversion

    § 3. Press . A flashing cursor appears. /T.SET 4. Enter the first currency name (up to 4 characters) and press to move the cursor to the right of the arrow. / INS 5. Enter the second currency name (up to 4 characters). &...
  • Page 28: Using The Calculator

    USING THE CALCULATOR You can use your organizer to perform arithmetic calculations. ¤ &$ Press to enter the calculation mode. appears. To CALC/ clear a calculation, press C/CE Notes: • If the result of a calculation has more than 10 digits, or if you try to divide by 0, (error) appears.
  • Page 29: Percentage Calculations

    • Press to recall (display) the value in memory. W/MR For example: 3 × 4 + 20 × 3 – 56 ÷ 8 You Press You See C '( 3 × 4 R/M+ C,& 20 × 3 R/M+ 56 ÷ 8 E/M– C,+ W/MR Note:...
  • Page 30: Reciprocal Calculations

    Press = to repeat the last function. For example, to calculate 5 × × × 629: You Press You See × ENTER(=) ENTER(=) ENTER(=) 2 ENTER(=) Reciprocal Calculations Example: = 0.125 You Press You See ÷ &$'(+ ENTER(=) Exponent Calculations Example: 6 = 7776 You Press...
  • Page 31: Care And Maintenance

    Care and Maintenance Keep the organizer dry; if it gets wet, wipe it dry immediately. Use and store the organizer only in normal temperature envi- ronments. Handle the organizer carefully; do not drop it. Keep the organizer away from dust and dirt, and wipe it with a damp cloth occasionally to keep it looking new.
  • Page 32 When the display dims or the organizer stops operating proper- ly, replace the battery. Warnings: • Dispose of old batteries promptly and properly. Do not burn or bury them. • Keep button-cell batteries away from children. Swallowing a button-cell battery can be fatal. Cautions: •...
  • Page 33: Resetting The Organizer

    2. Use a Phillips screwdriver to remove the battery compart- ment cover’s screw from the back of the organizer, then remove the cover. 3. Insert the tip of the screwdriver into the hole next to the bat- tery, then gently pry out the old battery. 4.
  • Page 34: Specifications

    Note: You must reset the current date and time when you reset the organizer. Specifications Power Source ............1 x CR2025 Battery Battery Life ....... About 740 days (operates 2 hours per day) Automatic Power-Off ............ About 7 minutes Working Temperature ............32° to 109°F (0°...
  • Page 35 Notes Notes...
  • Page 36 Limited One-Year Warranty This product is warranted by RadioShack against manufacturing defects in material and workmanship under normal use for one (1) year from the date of purchase from RadioShack company-owned stores and authorized RadioShack franchisees and dealers. EXCEPT AS PROVIDED HEREIN, RadioShack MAKES NO EXPRESS WARRANTIES AND ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING THOSE OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, ARE LIMITED IN DURATION TO THE DU- RATION OF THE WRITTEN LIMITED WARRANTIES CONTAINED HEREIN.

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65-1204

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