If this is your first smartphone

Welcome to the world of smartphones! Prepare to be impressed with all the ways you can organise and stay connected to the people and things most important to you. Check out these tips for a smooth start.

Charge it daily

Your new phone is like a small computer, giving you tons of information and apps. Depending on what you use, that can take a lot of power. Plan on charging your phone each night so it's ready for the next day.

Learn the basics

Your smartphone is, after all, a phone for making calls. But it also has a keyboard for sending texts and emails and a camera for taking photos and videos.

The status bar on your home screen displays the time and icons that tell you about your phone's battery and network connections.

Get apps

Your smartphone comes with many fun and useful apps, but you can really unlock its power by installing apps that suit your lifestyle. Go to Play Store to explore free and paid apps that help you be more productive, organised, informed, in touch and entertained.

Play Store also offers music, movies, TV shows and books.

Protect your phone

You carry your phone around with you, and accidents happen; phones get lost sometimes. So set up some security and prevent heartache if you and your phone become separated.

Set up a screen lock. This is your first line of defence in keeping your sensitive information safe. Prefer numbers, shapes, words? Set up a PIN, pattern or password required to unlock your phone.

A screen lock doesn't prevent you from immediately answering a call or accessing your camera. You can even set up lock screen widgets for limited views of your information, keeping full access to apps and info secure.

Display your owner info. On your lock screen, you can discreetly display a ‘please return’ message with some of your contact info so that, if your phone is lost, someone can to return it to you.

Enable lost phone features. For peace of mind, set up your Motorola ID now. As long as your phone is on and has a data or Wi-Fi connection, you can go to www.motorola.com/support from a desktop computer and:

  • Locate your phone, lock it with a new code and wipe your data from it
  • Ring your phone with an extra loud ring for a few minutes while you locate it
  • Enter a special message that will display on your phone in case it is found

Personalise your phone

While changing your wallpaper is probably your first customisation, don't stop there. Be sure to explore your Settings to set ringtones, font sizes, data usage preferences, keyboard preferences and much more. It's a great way to learn many of your phone's capabilities while customising it to suit your needs.

In most apps you can touch or for app-specific settings. Be sure to see what options are available to you there, too.

Manage mobile data

Understand your data usage. Keep an eye on your data usage and learn how to make the most of it. See which apps use large amounts of data and adjust their settings if you want. Set a usage warning and usage limit so that you don't surpass it. You can stop auto-syncing over your mobile data connection from quick settings by toggling the data connection off.

Use Wi-Fi to conserve mobile data. When you connect to a Wi-Fi network, your data will auto-sync over its connection instead of your mobile data connection, saving mobile data for when you need it. From quick settings, toggle the Wi-Fi connection on.

Useful to know

Tell your phone what to do. Use your phone hands-free with voice commands. Tell it to navigate you and listen to it speak the directions to you as you drive--it'll even reroute you if you've gone off course. Tell it to set alarms, find information on the web, make calls. Dictate instead of typing text. And be sure to use the Assist app's Driving features, which include voice readout for incoming calls and text messages.

Never miss a photo opportunity. Automatically open the Camera app with two quick twists of your phone, even from a locked screen. You can use apps that offer automatic backups of your captures, like Google+ and other photo sharing apps available from Play Store.

Store your stuff. Your new phone has a large amount of internal storage, so you can store items directly on your phone, instead of an SD card. You can open stored items in associated apps, like Gallery to see your photos and videos. It's simple to move items stored on your phone to a computer using the USB cable packaged with your phone.

For even more storage space, plus the ability to access your media and files from any internet connected device (phone, computer, tablet), your new phone gives you access to cloud storage. Your Google account even provides you free cloud storage on Google Drive, which has its own app and is also available in your apps from the menu throughout other apps.

When you know you'll have a weak connection or no connection, many of your apps let you pin cloud items, temporarily storing them on your phone. You can unpin when you're done to keep phone memory free.

Wi-Fi hotspot. You can share your phone's data connection as a Wi-Fi hotspot or directly tether your phone to a computer for Internet access. If you have other devices that need an internet connection (for example, a laptop, tablet or other phone), you can use your phone as a Wi-Fi hotspot.

Reset phone. In the unlikely event that your phone becomes unresponsive, frozen, shows a blank or black screen or does not respond to the Power button, you can restart it with a forced reset. Press and hold the Power button for 7 - 10 seconds. The phone will restart and reboot normally.

Certain features, services and applications are network or carrier dependent and may not be available in all areas.

global-en-gb-en-gb-3213-444 2015-04-14T14:59:42