>
New Topic
>
Reply<
Esato Forum Index
>
Regional >
Asia Pacific
> singapore
Bookmark topic
Quote:
On 2002-07-15 16:15, TonyG wrote:
dairin-> Great! Infact some of us contributes good suggestions. SE ppl do recgonised a few of us.
does it means when go to SESC and tell them we esato members we can get discount ??? just joking
hope if they need beta tester for their new phone, they will ask us . good idea huh ......
--
Posted: 2002-07-15 18:33:00
Edit :
Quote
I have just got my a T68m phone that is upgraded to t68i phone however apparently there isn't anyway that i can key in chinese text but the manual say can anyone can help me with that??? let me know i am very new to ericsson phone and just switch from nokia, cos disgusted by their poor design of the recent series of phone. anyone please help would be much grateful
--
Posted: 2002-07-15 18:42:00
Edit :
Quote
yeoenghwee-> Actually your question had been answered by me a lot of times already. But never mind, since you are new here, we all esato members will like to help all new members. I would be glad to explain to you once again. T68 after upgrading will be T68i, and it will follow your original sw there won't be any Chinese input in your new upgraded T68i. So, your handphone can only received Chinese SMS for you to read but you are not able to write. Only those who are holding T68mc and upgraded to T68ie than they are able to receive, read and write. In addition, now the new T68ie sw had T9 English input. So, now all T68ie owners are happy, this is because not only they can write Chinese, and now they can write English too. I am sure you can notice that your keypad do not have the Chinese stroke for you to write Chinese. The contents of the manual are for T68i and T68ie, that is the reason you can see them teaching you how to use Pinyin, Bopomofo and Chinese strokes. This is to teach those using T68ie only.
__________________________________________________

either you love it or you hate it
--
Posted: 2002-07-15 19:40:00
Edit :
Quote
yeoenghwee->welcome to SE T68 family
--
Posted: 2002-07-15 23:20:00
Edit :
Quote
Thanks Tony for your help. But heard that T68mc does not have the T9 Inout method so buyer have to junggle between chinese input or have a english predictive texton T68m. So SonyEricson have fix this problem with the launch of T68ie right???? Haiiii lost one more function should have confirm that T68m cannot use chinese text between i trade for this second hand t68m, upgrade to T68i, with my old phone Nokia 6510. Should have bring it in to a telephone shop and trade for a T68ie Instead.
--
Posted: 2002-07-16 05:22:00
Edit :
Quote
Orange3,
Sorry for the late reply. I just got online a while back and I didnt notice that I have 5 pms already. Yes, I can just give it to my sister when she leaves next week. You can just meet up there. If you cant wait, I can have it mailed and you can pay me thru demand draft. I had a t68mc gold for two days and had it replaced with a silver one. Unfortunately my country does not support mc so I had it upgraded in Goldhill. I eventually sold it and got a t68i instead. This was mainly because I wanted sw support without going abroad. By the way, the gold cover is as good as new.
Regards,
MFB
--
Posted: 2002-07-16 06:22:00
Edit :
Quote
yeoenghwee-> Yes, the original T68mc does not have T9 English. It is because due to the demanding in Asian market, than SE added in the T9 English in the "ie" sw. Whereas the T68m or T68mi and T68i are mostly cater for the European market, and they don't require Chinese language to be in.
________________________________________________

either you love it or you hate it
--
Posted: 2002-07-16 08:28:00
Edit :
Quote
hey guys, I just saw the silver T68i in 1 of the hp shops... It's very beautiful. It has chinese strokes on the keypad so i assume that the phone can have chinese input...

)
--
Posted: 2002-07-16 09:55:00
Edit :
Quote
MFB,
I had a talk with the SE Engineer this afternoon. He had explained to me tentatively how this T9 dictionary works. He also do not want to keep you waiting for too long. Now, the space of the dictionary is based on how many letterings are inside. An example. Say for alphabet "A" in the dictionary you may have apple, axe, animals...already in the dictionary. The empty space for you to add in will be based on the words that you are keying in. You may able to save the extra words like ace, alert, with less lettering. But if you key in a long words like alphanumeric and try to save in your dictionary, if the space is not enough, it will reject you. That is how sometimes you cannot save in some words into the dictionary. If the dictionary is full, you cannot delete it but you can save in some other smaller words and it will overide one of the words in there. Hopefully my explanation will make you understand. However SE will be giving you an official reply later after they have come out a better explanation to you.
___________________________________________________

either you love it or you hate it

[ This Message was edited by: TonyG on 2002-07-16 15:16 ]
--
Posted: 2002-07-16 10:41:00
Edit :
Quote
Thanks for the explanation TonyG!
Hope they can come up with a solution too.
This post was posted from a WAP device
--
Posted: 2002-07-16 16:10:00
Edit :
Quote
New Topic
Reply