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Intermec 6110 Personal Computer User Manual
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1. I O Suspend and Resume Key Serial Ports 22 452858 vee eee ee ee oe eee Resetting sy er rendre dnd Bie Slade AE ade ee Options and Accessories Radio Card Aus or ii suit eaten ee Integrated Scanner Pod Port Replicator it ts cuite nb dura Magnetic Stripe Reader Serial Pod cc whee atn aa bahia va ee aaa Global Systems for Mobile Communication GSM with Subscriber Identity Module SIM Hand Held Computer Specifications 1 1 1 2 1 4 1 4 1 5 1 6 1 10 1 10 1 11 1 11 1 11 1 11 1 12 1 13 1 14 1 15 1 16 1 17 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide i CONTENTS SECTION 2 Operation I NEFOAUCEION oe cn td nad dead ewe muse be made 2 1 Getting Started 2 1 Rechargeable Battery Label 2 2 Installing the Main Battery 2 3 Charging The Batteries 2 4 In Your Hand Held Computer 2 4 In External Source 2 6 Removing the Main Battery 2 8 Measuring Battery Pack Capacity 2 9 Backup Battery 2 10 Backup Battery Life 2 10 Using PC Cards to Load Your Programs 2 11 Drives ied ters ER D dang
2. B 5 Communications Menu B 6 Option 1 BEGIN COMM SESSION B 7 Option 2 COMM SETTING B 17 Option 3 UNIT TD B 21 Option 4 NETWORK PARAMETERS B 21 Option 4 MODEM PARAMETERS B 23 Option 5 NETWORK INTERFACE B 27 Option 5 PHONE NUMBER B 28 Option 9 ADVANCED UTILITIES B 29 FIGURES Figure 1 1 Front View 1 3 Figure 1 2 Back View 1 3 Figure 1 3 16 Key Keyboard 1 4 Figure 1 4 PC Card Slots 1 8 Figure 1 5 PC Card Slots 1 9 Figure 1 6 Integrated Scanner Pod 1 12 Figure 1 7 Port Replicator 1 13 Figure 1 8 Magnetic Stripe Reader 1 14 Figure 1 9 Serial Pod 1 15 Figure 1 10 GSM with SIM card 1 16 Figure 2 1 Installing Main Battery Pack 2 3 Figure 2 2 Power Status LED 2 5 Figure 2 3 Multipack Charger 2 6 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide iii CONTENTS Figure 2 4 Single Pack Charger 2 7 Figure 2 5 SPAN Charger 2 7 Figure 2 6 Removing the Main Battery Pack 2
3. UCS Uniform Communications Standard UCS is an EDI Standard that applies specifically to the grocery retail industry UPC Universal Product Code A bar code symbology used throughout the grocery and retail industries Upload The transmission of data from a mobile computer to a host computer WAN Wide Area Network A network that covers a large geographic area Contrast with LAN Window ADK An area on your screen in which you view an application or data Wireless The transmission of data using radio waves Glossary 20 6110 Series Hand Held Computer User s Guide Backlight 1 5 Backup battery 2 10 installing 2 10 lithium 1 6 Batteries 1 5 backup 1 6 installing 2 10 life 2 10 lithium 1 6 main 1 5 care 3 1 cycles 1 6 installing 2 3 lithium ion 1 5 low battery indication 3 1 removing 2 8 Boot drive statement 2 11 c Charging main and backup bat teries the first time 2 3 Charging main battery 2 4 in hand held computer 2 4 not in hand held computer 2 4 multipack charger 2 4 single pack charger 2 4 Cleaning 3 2 case 3 2 contact surfaces 3 2 display 3 2 docking connector 3 2 keyboard 3 2 Connectors A 2 A 3 8 pin docking connector A 2 phone jack pin outs A 3 D Display options touch screen 1 5 Drives 2 11 E Ejector buttons 2 13 F Port replicator 1 13 First time charge main and backup batteries 2 3 G Gold shift key 1 10
4. Right Click CMOS Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor Controller CPU 1 Usually refers to the system configuration and real time clock information which is often stored in CMOS memory 2 The construction method for a type of low power computer chip The communication control element of the NORAND radio data network Controls the timing and flow of data messages between the host computer and the radio terminals Central Processing Unit CRC Customer Response Center The Norand Mobile Systems Division of Intermec Technologies Corporation CRC technical support telephone 1 800 755 7705 Email crc norand com If you want to Email a problen or question to the CRC be sure to include the following information in your message Your name The company name The company address Phone and Email address where you or the customer can be contacted Problem description Question be specific 6110 Series Hand Held Computer User s Guide Glossary 3 GLOSSARY Also if the equipment was purchased through a VAR please include the VAR information Default Drive See Boot Default Drive Dock A device in which one or more hand held computers may be placed for charging and communication DOS Disk Operating System A program or set of programs that tells a disk based computer system to schedule and supervise work manage computer resources and operate and control its peripheral devices Double Click Press th
5. DDD Keypad QE DC Power J ack Optional External RF J ack Infrared IrDA Docking Connector Lens Speaker Slot Figure 1 1 Front View Battery Pack Battery Pack Latch Magnetic Strip Reader optional PC Card Door RJ 45 J ack op tional A External Antenna J ack or DEX Connector optional Figure 1 2 Back View 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 1 3 General Information SECTION 1 Hand Held Computer Keyboard The hand held computer provides a 16 key keyboard All keys with the exception of the I O key are programmable for individual functions Figure 1 3 details the basic keyboard layout Power Status LED Scanning Status LED 1 0 Suspend Resume Key Tab Key BkSp Back Space Key GOLD Shift Key Numeric Keys ENTER Key ESC Escape Key Figure 1 3 16 Key Keyboard 1 4 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide SECTION 1 General Information Display This hand held computer offers an easy to read Liquid Crystal Display LCD with touch screen The display shows status messages keyed in entries customer or prod uct lists calculations and prompts for responses The touch screen can be used with a stylus or your finger to choose functions record signatures or enter data Adjusting the contrast setting for the display is done by pressing the gold Shift key and tap either the 1 increase or 2 decrea
6. F2ITEST STRING ENT JOK ESC QUIT NOTE Zero indicates the modem was successfully configured Any other value indicates an error See page B 13 for a list of modem errors If you purchased this modem from the Norand Mobile Systems Divi sion contact Customer Response Center at 800 755 5505 U S A or Canada or 425 356 1799 If this modem is not from the Norand Mobile Systems Division con tact your modem supplier b Press the ENT key to update the modem initialization string The computer returns to the Modem Parameters pop up menu with OTHER EXTERNAL or OTHER INTERNAL assigned 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide B 25 NOTE PEN KEY Utilities Program APPENDIX B Suboption 2 PROTOCOL If you select this suboption a drop down list of available protocols appears 1 TTY TTY is the only protocol currently supported Press the number of a protocol or press the Y or B keys to scroll through the list then press the ENT key to enter The computer returns to the Modem Parameters pop up menu with the selected protocol assigned Press the ESC key to exit this drop down list Suboption 3 BPS RATE If you select this suboption the BPS Rate drop down list appears with various bits per second BPS rates 1200 2400 4800 9600 19200 38400 57600 115200 Press the number of a BPS rate or press theY or B keys to scroll through the list then press the ENT
7. PEN KEY Tool Kits System oriented programmer s tool kits The current tool kits support 6100 6200 6300 6400 6600 Computers PEN KEY Utilities A program that provides the basic functions needed to prepare the PEN KEY for use including program load and data communications Glossary 14 6110 Series Hand Held Computer User s Guide PenRight Physical Port GLOSSARY A third party development environment that allows users to create DOS or Windows applications by dragging and dropping You can visit their web site at www penright com Equates to port connector The 4980 Controller has four internal physical ports A B C and D It also has six connectors A B C D LANT and LAN 2 Ports B C and D are permanently attached to the 15 pin connectors labeled B C and D respectively on the back of the controller Port A is attached to either the 15 pin RS 232 connector labeled A or to both of the two 9 pin RS 485 connectors labeled LAN 1 and LAN 2 Port A is attached to the RS 485 connectors when it is configured as aLAN port otherwise it is attached to the RS 232 connector labeled A PING Packet Internet Groper Pixel Plug and Play Polled Protocol Port A utility program that determines if a TCP IP connection exists between a workstation and a server The smallest graphic unit to b
8. Suboption 1 NETWORK If you select this suboption a drop down list appears with various networks 1 NPCP RS485 2 NPCP RS232 3 NRINET 4 TFTP 5 NOVELL NETWARE Press the number of a network or press the Y or B keys to scroll through the list then press the ENT key to enter The computer returns to the Communications Menu with the selected network assigned to Option 2 COMM SETTING Seea sample menu on page B 6 Press the ESC key to exit this drop down list The com puter takes you to the Communications Menu B 18 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide APPENDIX B PEN KEY Utilities Program Suboption 2 MODEM DIRECT If you select this suboption the computer returns to the Communications Menu with the MODEM DIRECT option assigned to Option 2 COMM SETTING PEN KEY UTILITIES COMMUNICATIONS 1 2 3 4 BEGIN COMM SESSION COMM SETTING MODEM DIRECT UNIT ID MODEM PARAMETERS MODEM TYPE NM2400 NM2400A PROTOCOL BPS FMT TTY 2400 8N1 AUTO ANSWER ESC PHONE NUMBER 9 131369282 ADVANCED UTILITIES 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide B 19 PEN KEY Utilities Program APPENDIX B Suboption 3 ACCESSORY CARD Suboption 6 INTERSERVER If you select either of these suboptions the computer re turns to the Communications Menu with ACCESSORY CARD or INTERSERVER assigned to Option 2 COMM SETTING PEN KEY UTILITIES COMMUNICATIONS 1 BEGIN COMM SESSION 2 COMM SETT
9. 8 Figure 2 7 Main Battery Pack Underside View Showing Contacts 2 9 Figure 2 8 Accessing the PC Card Slots 2 12 Figure 2 9 Individual PC Card Slot Ejector Buttons 2 13 Figure 2 10 Installing Modem Card 2 14 Figure 2 11 Installing Modem Cable 2 15 Figure 2 12 Using the Magnetic Stripe Reader 2 16 Figure 2 13 Removing SIM Socket Cover 2 17 Figure 2 14 Installing SIM 2 18 Figure A 1 Docking Connector Pin Outs A 2 Figure A 2 Phone J ack Pin Outs A 3 TABLES Table 4 1 Basic Troubleshooting 4 2 GLOSSARY INDEX iv 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide Section 1 General Information About This User s Guide Section 1 Contains general information about the components of your Intermec 6110 Hand Held Computer This includes telling you how the user guide is organized a summary of the sec tions and the specifications for your hand held computer Section 2 Tells you how to prepare for using your computer Section 3 Contains routine maintenance information for your comput er Routine maintenance includes recharging the main bat tery pack and cleaning the computer Section 4 Steps you through some procedures to use when trouble shooting your computer This section does not contain all troubleshooting that can be done
10. Channel The drive from which the computer will boot By default it is the flash drive D but another drive RAM drive or card slot may be selected The ability to run the CONFIG SYS and AUTOEXEC BAT from an ATA card In some older versions of flash the CONFIG SYS from the flash drive had to be run to load the drivers for the ATA card With Bootable ATA the CONFIG SYS and AUTOEXEC BAT arerun from the ATA card without loading any drivers The main multiple access network cable or line that connects network stations Also refers to a network topology of multiple stations communicating directly with the same cable with terminators at both ends like an Ethernet or token bus An object that can be clicked selected or unselected in your windows Usually an event tree is attached to a button so that when it is clicked an action is performed Carrier detect Compact disk a removable read only storage medium Refers to a logical data channel A port may contain one or more channels Data for any given wireless station is Glossary 2 6110 Series Hand Held Computer User s Guide GLOSSARY Click contiguous on a channel Each of the remote ports on a controller may contain up to three channels apiece Press the primary mouse button to select an object on the screen with the pointer Unless reversed for left handed operation the left mouse button is the primary button and the right mouse button is the secondary button See also
11. Disassemble BATTERY MUST BE RECYCLED Or manae or osposeo oF propency OOOO warna The lithium ion battery can explode if replaced incorrectly Replace the battery with a similar kind ve RTISSEMENT La batterie au lithium peut exploser si elle est replac e de mani re incorrecte Elle ne doit tre remplac e que par une batterie identique ou similaire warnine The lithium battery can explode if placed incorrectly in the charger ave RTISSEMENT Les batteries au lithium peuvent exploser ou prendre feu si elles sont trop charg es cause d une mauvaise installation de la station d accueil 2 2 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide SECTION 2 Operation Installing the Main Battery NOTE Your computer is shipped with uncharged batteries for safety rea sons Refer to Figure 2 1 to show how to install the battery pack in your computer Charge your computer for 14 hours before using it the first time This will ensure that both the main and backup batter ies are fully charged 1 With the gold battery pack contacts facing into the battery compartment place the curved portion of the pack in the bottom of the compartment 2 Press down on the battery pack until it snaps into place As you press down on the battery pack you should hear three clicks before the pack is completely seated into place NOTE After the initial charging of 14 hours the normal charge time for the main battery pack is 2 1 2 ho
12. KEY computers the smaller type Il card occupies one slot while a type III card blocks the second slot The card may be used for data storage modem printer wireless or other purposes Generally PC Card is used in reference to devices whereas PCMCIA is a reference to the standard 6110 Series Hand Held Computer User s Guide Glossary 13 GLOSSARY PC Card Icon An icon located in the System Tray which indicates a PC Card is plugged into the PC Card slot See also System Tray PCMCIA Personal Computer Memory Card International Association An industry group responsible for creation of the standard for devices slightly larger than a credit card for small computers such as laptop and hand held computers Formerly devices were referred to as PCMCIA cards but are now generally referred to as PC Cards while PCMCIA is a reference to the standard PDU Protocol Data Unit SNMP An OSI term for packet A data object exchanged by protocol machines entities within a given layer In TCP IP it defines the type of SNMP message being sent Pen An input device similar in usage to a mouse but similar in appearance to a writing instrument Pend Wait for a particular response or event to occur Used interchangeably with wait PEN KEY A family of NORAND Hand Held Computers also known as the 6000 Series with touch screen capability Examples include 6100 6110 6210 6300 6350 6400 6500 and 6600 Computers
13. O LED off one LED less than 25 capacity two LEDs 25 50 capacity three LEDs 50 75 capacity 6000 four LEDs more than 75 Figure 2 7 Main Battery Pack Underside View Showing Contacts 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 2 9 Operation SECTION 2 Backup Battery This hand held computer comes with two 100 mA hour va nadium lithium backup batteries These batteries provide protection of your data when the main battery is removed from the hand held computer or when the main battery goes into a low battery condition The backup battery will not nor is it intended to run your application with the main battery pack run down or removed from your comput er A fully charged backup battery will provide protection for maintaining data approximately 2 days with the main bat tery removed or completely run down The backup battery is not user replaceable To have your backup battery replaced send it in to the Customer Service Center nearest you Whenever you send in your hand held computer for service include a description of what you would like to have done Backup Battery Life The backup battery is rechargeable and will recharge every time it needs it from either an external charging source or the main battery pack If completely run down it will take at least 14 hours to completely recharge the backup battery A frequently run down main battery will not keep the back up battery fully charged The backup battery
14. PC card compartment contains ejector buttons for re moving the cards from the slots see Figure 2 9 for location The bottom slot also has a plastic latch called an ATA latch which retains the card in the slot This latch must be pressed before you can remove the card from the slot The latch is to prevent the card which contains the Operating System from being removed accidentally ATA Latch Individual Slot Ejector Buttons Figure 2 9 Individual PC Card Slot Ejector Buttons Press in on the ejector button to release and eject the card The button will eject the card far enough so you can pull it the rest of the way with your fingers 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 2 13 Operation SECTION 2 Installing a Modem Card The modem card can go into either the top or middle slot with your computer in the position shown in Figure 2 10 However it you are also going to use a radio card install the modem card in the middle slot B To install 1 Lift the PC card door tab and flip open see Figure 2 8 2 Slide the modem card into slot B see Figure 2 10 Modem card shown partially installed in Slot B Figure 2 10 Installing Modem Card 2 14 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide SECTION 2 Operation 3 Push the modem card all the way into the slot 4 Lineup the modem cable to the connector on the mo dem card and push into place s
15. commands outstanding Invalid LAN adapter number Command completed while cancel occurring Command not valid to cancel 164 179 Unusual network condition 180 354 Adapter malfunction These error codes apply when COMM SETTINGS is set to MODEM DIRECT and PROTOCOL is set to TTY Q 6 11 23 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 199 ox No error ESC key pressed aborting communications Invalid parameter specified in control file End of transmission Line lost Parity error Character gap too long Data loss Excessive NAKs negative acknowledgements Block count error Block check error Block framing error Control character error Modem error xx Hayes response code or code defined by program 03 No carrier 04 Command not recognized 06 Nodial tone 07 Dialed number is busy 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide B 13 PEN KEY Utilities Program APPENDIX B 08 Noanswer 86 Error sending command to modem 87 Expected numeric response not numeric 88 Invalid response format 89 Nosignificant response from modem 97 COM port disabled by system due to low battery or removal of PC card modem 98 Unrecognized English response 99 Memory allocation error NOTE For response codes not listed above if you purchased this modem from
16. key to enter The computer returns to the Modem Parameters pop up menu with the selected BPS rate assigned Press the ESC key to exit this drop down list B 26 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide APPENDIX B PEN KEY Utilities Program Suboption 4 DATA FORMAT If you select this suboption the Data Format drop down list appears 1 8N1 2 7E1 Press the number of a data format or press the Y or B keys to scroll through the list then press the ENT key to enter The computer returns to the Modem Parameters pop up menu with the selected data format assigned Press the ESC key to exit this drop down list Suboption 5 AUTO ANSWER This suboption is not supported at this time Option 5 NETWORK INTERFACE Network Interface appears as Option 5 when Option 2 COMM SETTINGS is set toNRINET TFTP or NOVELL NETWARE If you select this option the Network Interface drop down list appears 1 ETHERNET 2 RS485 Press the number of a network interface or press the Y or B keys to scroll through the list then press the ENT key to enter The computer returns to the Communications menu with the selected network interface assigned 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide B 27 PEN KEY Utilities Program APPENDIX B Option 5 PHONE NUMBER Phone Number appears as Option 5 when Option 2 COMM SETTINGS is set to MODEM DIRECT If you select this option the Phone Number pop up m
17. should last approximately 2000 dis charge and recharge cycles if deep discharged maintains data for 16 hours if your unit has 32 MBs of RAM and pro vides service for about 5 years before it needs to be re placed If your hand held computer alerts you that the backup battery needs to be replaced send it in to the Cus tomer Service Center for replacement 2 10 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide SECTION 2 Operation Using PC Cards to Load Your Programs Drives Drive C ATA drive in slot closest to the display Booting In order to boot your hand held computer format on an ATA PC card with the system files and put it into the slot closest to the display Drive C For complete details on creating a boot card refer tothe instructions in the PEN KEY Moda 6110 Series Hand Had Computer Programmer s Reference Guide PN 977 054 001 BIOS Update To update the BIOS stored in the flash 6 E XE obtain the latest from the Intermec web site and execute the BIOS Re flash Program Installing PC Cards 1 Lift the PC card door tab and flip open 2 Slide the cards in one of the slots 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 2 11 SECTION 2 Operation PC Card Slot Door V V YY STE A Slot Door Open Individual Card Slots Figure 2 8 Accessing the PC Card Slots 2 12 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide SECTION 2 Operation Removing PC Cards The
18. vendor usually with patent trade mark or copyright protection Protocol A formal description of message formats and the rules computers must follow to exchange those messages Protocol Stack SNMP A modular set of functions one at each layer of the stack that form a network service Each layer of the stack uses the services of the module beneath it Radio Network Radio enabled network devices and communication paths A group of fixed end devices and wireless stations in which Glossary 16 6110 Series Hand Held Computer User s Guide GLOSSARY each can communicate with at least one other device through either a radio or wired link Secondary LANs are part of the radio network the primary distribution LAN is not part of the radio network RAM Random Access Memory Dynamic memory sometimes known as main memory or core RAM Drive An area of random access memory configured to work like a disk drive RAS Remote Access Server Redundancy The ability of a duplicate access point to immediately take over the function of another access point that goes offline Repeater SNMP An electronic device used to regenerate at full strength signals which have become too weak Used with digital signals it ignores extraneous voltages such as noise Reset Button A switch which causes the computer to reboot RI Ring Indicator RS 232 C Recommended Standard 232 An Electronic Industries Association standard interface be
19. wireless link The wired link may have several segments joined by repeaters and bridges The LAN is characterized by the relatively short distance it is designed to cover a high speed of operation and relatively low error rates The geographic scope of LANs is limited to thousands of feet or closel y spaced building complexes Laser Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation Layer A method of scanning that uses a coherent light consisting of one frequency with high density of energy A modular portion of a stacked protocol that consists of one or more semi independent protocols Each layer builds on 6110 Series Hand Held Computer User s Guide Glossary 9 GLOSSARY the layer beneath it and feeds information to the protocols in the layers above it TCP IP has five layers of protocols and OSI has seven LCD Liquid Crystal Display LLC Logical Link Control The upper portion of the data link layer defined in the IEEE 802 2 standard The LLC layer represents a uniform interface to the user of the data link service usually a network layer Local Controller A controller which is directly connected to a host computer A local controller uses either secondary ADCCP or ASYNC on its host port Master Boot Card SeelFL Card MB Megabyte One million bytes Memory Cards See PC Card Modem A communication device that enables a computer to transmit information over a telephone line Modem Baud Rate The
20. 2 4 shows a single pack charger Battery Pack Compartments 8 Fuse Power Cord Connector Figure 2 3 Multipack Charger 2 6 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide SECTION 2 Operation Power Cord Battery Pack Compartment Battery Pack Contacts Charge Indicator LED Figure 2 4 Single Pack Charger Battery Pack Contacts Battery Pack Compartment Charge Indicator LED Figure 2 5 SPAN Charger 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 2 7 Operation SECTION 2 Removing the Main Battery The following steps on pages 2 8 and 2 9 detail how to remove the main battery check how much power the bat tery contains and replace the battery pack NOTE If you are using Windows 95 ensure that you shut down that opera tion before removing the battery pack Otherwise your computer will treat this as a crash 1 Press and hold down on the Release Button see Figure 2 6 Figure 2 7 and pages 2 8 and 2 9 for battery compartment details This causes your com puter to go into a suspend mode and makes sure you do not lose your data 2 Slide the Battery Latch towards the release button and remove the battery Figure 26 Removing the Main Battery Pack 2 8 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide SECTION 2 Operation Measuring Battery Pack Capacity 1 Touch finger across first two contacts 2 Capacity is displayed from right to left The higher the capacity the more LEDs light LEDon
21. 5 Troubleshooting chart 4 2 Type I card slot drive C 2 11 U Using the card reader 2 16 Using the MSR 2 16 Using the stripe reader 2 16 Utilities program B 1 communications menu B 6 communications menu op tions ADVANCED UTILITIES B 29 BEGIN COMM SESSION B 7 Index 2 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide COMM SETTING B 17 MODEM PARAMETERS B 23 NETWORK INTERFACE B 27 PHONE NUMBER B 28 UNIT ID B 21 communications menu subop tions ACCESSORY CARD B 20 AUTO ANSWER B 27 BPS RATE B 26 DATA FORMAT B 27 HANDHELD B 20 INTERSERVER B 20 MODEM TYPES B 23 MODEM DIRECT B 19 NETWORK B 18 OTHER EXTERNAL B 24 OTHER INTERNAL B 24 PROTOCOL B 26 REMOTE OPS B 20 SET DATE TIME B 30 language selection B 5 network parameters with NOVELL NETWARE B 23 with NRINET or TFTP B 22 title screen B 4
22. C Card slot See also ATA Card Flash Card SanDisk or Spinning Media An area of memory set aside for dynamic allocation by a program HHC Hand Held Computer A generic acronym for a NORAND Hand Held Computer including the 4000 Series 43XX 44XX 4500 and the PEN KEY or 6000 Series 61XX 62XX 63XX 6400 65XX 66XX Also the trademark of another company HHC Remote Port Hop Host An ADCCP TTY or NPCP port which can connect to HHC or remote controllers Data channels on HHC ports are multiplexed onto the host port Used in vector distance routing A hop equals one data link A path tothe final destination on a net is a series of hops away from the origin A customer s host computer A computer that provides services directly to users such as the user s computer In TCP IP an IP addressed device 6110 Series Hand Held Computer User s Guide Glossary 7 GLOSSARY A large computer that serves many users such as a minicomputer or mainframe Host Address The part of an internet address that designates which node on the Sub network is being addressed Also called host number Host Computer A large computer that serves many users such as a PC minicomputer or mainframe Host Controller A 4980 Controller that is functioning as a host toa secondary controller Host Port com4980 A port that can connect to a host or a 4980 Network Controller Host System com4980 The Unix system that the CO
23. GSM 1 16 SIM card 1 16 1 0 key 1 10 Installing memory cards 2 11 Installing modem cards 2 14 Installing PC memory cards 2 11 Integrated scanner pod 1 12 K Keyboard features 30 key keypad 1 4 56 key keypad 1 4 Keypad options 30 key keypad 1 4 56 key keypad 1 4 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide INDEX L Loading programs 2 11 M Magnetic card reader 1 14 using 2 16 Magnetic stripe card reader 1 14 Magnetic stripe reader using 2 16 Main battery 1 5 2 3 2 8 care 3 1 cycles 1 6 installing 2 3 lithium ion 1 5 low battery indication 3 1 removing 2 8 Measuring battery pack capac ity 2 9 Memory card installing 2 11 removing 2 13 types typell 1 7 type lll 1 7 Memory types flash ROM 1 6 main 1 6 MSR magnetic stripe reader 1 14 using 2 16 N Normal charging time main battery 2 3 o Optional integrated scanner pod 1 12 Index 1 INDEX Optional magnetic stripe reader 1 14 Optional serial pod 1 15 P PC cards 1 6 types typell 1 7 typelll 1 7 PC memory card installing 2 11 removing 2 13 Product feature descriptions 1 2 R Radio module 1 11 Removing memory cards 2 13 Removing PC memory cards 2 13 Repair service 4 6 Reset switch 1 11 S Serial pod 1 15 Serial ports 1 11 Shift key 1 10 SIM 1 16 Specifications 1 17 Subscriber Identity Module SIM 1 16 Suspend and Resume key 1 10 T Touch screen display 1
24. ING ACCESSORY CARD 3 UNIT ID 9 ADVANCED UTILITIES Suboption 4 HANDHELD Suboption 5 REMOTE OPS These suboptions are not supported at this time B 20 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide APPENDIX B PEN KEY Utilities Program Option 3 UNIT ID If you select this option the Change Unit ID pop up menu appears CHANGE UNIT ID UNIT ID 2233233 WORKGROUP 6200IPL FA RESET FACTORY ESCIQUIT Enter up to eight characters to change the Unit ID Usethe lt SP key to backspace and use the CLR to restore the previous ID Press the ENT key to save the new ID and return to the Communications Settings menu Press the F4 key to reset the ID to factory default Press ESC to exit this pop up menu Option 4 NETWORK PARAMETERS Network Parameters appears as Option 4 when Option 2 COMM SETTINGS is set to one of these three NETWORK options NRINET TFTP or NOVELL NETWARE 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide B 21 PEN KEY Utilities Program APPENDIX B NETWORK PARAMETERS with NRINET or TFTP If you select this option and Option 2 COMM SETTINGS is set toNRINET or TFTP this Network Parameters pop up menu appears NETWORK PARAMETERS SERVER NAME SERVER IP ADDRESS 0 0 0 0 CLIENT IP ADDRESS 0 0 0 0 ROUTER 0 0 0 SUBNET MASK 0 0 0 0 If you have an alphanumeric keyboard press the characters to the host name then press the ENT key to save the ent
25. M 4980 Package runs on Hot Swap Remove and insert a PC Card without rebooting the unit 1 0 Key The power suspend or resume switch on the 6100 Computer not the same as the reset button Suspends or resumes operation depending on the current state of the computer Icon A symbol on the computer desktop that graphically represents the purpose or function of an application or file IFL Card Initial Flash Load An SRAM card that installs the flash contents on most PEN KEY systems InfraRed A method for short range wireless data communication Glossary 8 6110 Series Hand Held Computer User s Guide GLOSSARY internet Internet IrDA KB Kilobyte While a network internet usually refers to a collection of networks interconnected with routers See also network Note the capital I The world s largest internet including large national backbone nets such as MILNET NSFNET and CREN and many regional and local networks world wide The Internet uses the TCP IP suite Networks with only Email connectivity are not considered on the Internet InfraRed see also IrDA A standard for InfraRed communications An IrDA device creates a connection between two devices or a device and a network without a physical connection using signals transmitted in the infrared spectrum One thousand bytes LAN Local Area Network A group of network devices in which each device can communicate through a wired or
26. MODEM DIRECT this Com munication Status menu appears PEN KEY UTILITIES COMMUNICATIONS COMM SETTINGS MODEM DIRECT MODEM TYPE NM2400 NM2400A PROTOCOL BPS FMT TTY 2400 8N1 AUTO ANSWER ESC CONFIGURING LAST SESSION T289 NO RESPONSE FROM MODEM ESC STOP COMM NOTE The computer may stay at the CONFIGURING screen for about 20 seconds if a modem is not detected If the session is unsuccessful LAST SESSION appears with the failure status such as T 289 B 10 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide APPENDIX B PEN KEY Utilities Program BEGIN COMM SESSION with ACCESSORY CARD If you select the communications option and Option 2 COMM SETTINGS is set to ACCESSORY CARD the system attempts to execute the application from a PC card If the MISSING SYSTEM FILES message appears press the ENT key to continue BEGIN COMM SESSION with INTERSERVER If you select the communications option and Option 2 COMM SETTINGS is set to INTERSERVER this Com munication Status menu appears Transfer Press the ESC key to exit this screen 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide B 11 PEN KEY Utilities Program APPENDIX B Session Status The first single character code T is the session status which applies to all COMM SETTINGS There are five sta tuses possible ug uy qn pn a Good session Unexpected end of transmission Incorrect file heade
27. by an authorized Custom er Support Specialist but does contain information to aid you in determining the level of assistance you may need 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 1 1 General Information SECTION 1 Appendix A Contains the pin outs for the external connectors of your hand held computer This section is not usually needed for day to day tasks but more to provide technical assistance for interfacing with other manufacturer s products Appendix B Contains the Utilities Program screens This is system level information for your system administration people when defining and setting parameters to support your applica tion Hand Held Computer Description Hand held computers are used in the mobile systems mar ketplace to perform a wide variety of tasks This hand held computer provides features and benefits that include Fast data processing Large data and program storage Touch screen display Signature capture Additionally your computer has the ability to use PC Personal Computer cards Internal modem with PC card size and format The following descriptions will familiarize you with the name function and locations of the main computer compo nents Figure 1 1 and Figure 1 2 on pages 1 3 show you the location for your hand held computer key components 1 2 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide General Information SECTION 1 Touch Screen Stylus Dims mth DIX Dai
28. canner Housing Laser Scanner Lens Figure 1 6 Integrated Scanner Pod 1 12 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide SECTION 1 General Information Port Replicator Slide the Port Replicator onto the computer as shown in Figure 1 7 Power J ack for connecting to the wall charger or cigar lighter adapter IrDA Port Keyboard Connector RF Antenna Connector Serial Port Figure1 7 Port Replicator 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 1 13 Genera Information SECTION 1 Magnetic Stripe Reader The Magnetic Stripe Reader MSR is an optional attach ment for your hand held computer Your MSR reads credit charge and debit for example ATM cards Figure 1 8 Magnetic Stripe Reader 1 14 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide SECTION 1 General Information Serial Pod The serial pod provides a standard 9 pin serial port on a standard D sub connector As a software configuration op tion 5 volts of power can be provided on pin 9 the Ring pin This option powers external devices such as tethered scanners 9 pin D sub Serial Port Connector RJ 45 J ack External Antenna J ack or DEX Connector Figure 1 9 Serial Pod 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 1 15 General Information SECTION 1 Global Systems for Mobile Communication GSM with Subscriber Identity Module SIM Allowing access to the SIM allows you to change service providers and not
29. cklight 240 wide by 320 long pixel portrait orientation panning enables viewing of a full 640 x 480 window 1 18 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide Section 2 Operation Introduction This section tells you how to Install the main battery pack Power up your hand held computer Install PC cards Connect to peripheral devices Getting Started Unpack your Intermec 6110 Hand Held Computer and in spect it for signs of physical damage from shipment or stor age When you start using your hand held computer or any time that all power has been completely removed you are cold booting your hand held computer The method you use de pends on your application For example you may download transfer from the host computer to your hand held computer the application and data into your computer Or you may use PC cards to load the application and data Depending on the method you are using the result will be the same but the steps you go through may vary from the way this user s guide presents the material 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 2 1 Operation SECTION 2 Rechargeable Battery Label Lithium ION rechargeable batteries must be recycled This is the label that appears on the battery pack 6110 TERMINAL BATTERY PACK THIS SIDE FACES IN 317 206 001 ON Touch contacts to view capacity 9742 72V LI ION Made in J apan CAUTION Burn hazard LITHIUM ION RECHARGEABLE Do Not
30. e APPENDIX B PEN KEY Utilities Program Alphanumeric Fields SERVER NAME LU N INCORPORATED SERVER IP ADDRESS 123 123 123 123 CLIENT IP ADDRESS 123 123 123 123 ROUTER 0 0 0 SUBNET MASK 0 0 0 If your computer has a numeric keyboard enter alphanu meric data by pressing theA and keys to scroll back and forth through the set of alphanumeric characters After a character is selected press the ENT key to enter that character Press ENT again to move to the nett field If your computer has an alphanumeric keyboard press the characters then press the ENT key to move to the next field Press ENT to save the entries and exit the menu Press the ESC key to exit without saving the entries 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide B 3 PEN KEY Utilities Program APPENDIX B Title Screen When you reboot or reset your computer the Title Screen appears PEN KEY UTILITIES PSROMOC Vx xx COPYRIGHT 1994 1999 INTERMEC TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ENTICONTINUE Press the ENT key to continue B 4 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide APPENDIX B PEN KEY Utilities Program Language Selection NOTE The PEN KEY Utilities Program checks files for available language options If no language resource files exist you do not see this menu If your application requires non English languages the Language Selection menu appears English is the first op tion
31. e default is the first frequency in the list Glossary 18 6110 Series Hand Held Computer User s Guide SRAM Card Stack Stylus GLOSSARY A memory storage PC Card which functions like a floppy disk A dynamically shrinking and expanding area of memory in which data items are stored in consecutive order and removed on a Last In First Out basis LIFO A pen shaped device used for input on a touch screen by tapping or sliding TCOM or Telecom Terminal Tethered Toggle ADK Touch Screen TTY TXD Telecommunications Circuit terminating device such as a hand held computer ADK Portable elements in the radio data network Provide a wireless portability with two way interactive data communication capabilities A scanning device requiring a cable between the computer and the scanner Action of turning an option on or off A display which responds to tactile pressure as input Two way TTY asynchronous data link protocol Transmit data UART Universal Asynchronous Receiver Transmitter This chip allows a serial port to communicate with other computers or networks through the peripherals Devices 6110 Series Hand Held Computer User s Guide Glossary 19 GLOSSARY such as internal serial modems rely on the UART for communications UCC Uniform Code Council The UCC is responsible for many things one of which is the administration of UCS The UCC is also responsible for assigning UPCs to suppliers
32. e displayed on screen The combination of BIOS operating system and peripheral device components that provides an environment that configures itself thereby avoiding potential hardware conflicts for the operating system by polling the peripheral devices assessing their requirements and determining and implementing optimal settings for each device A system for multiplexing with more than one radio terminal by systematically querying each unit for traffic The physical hardware communication port 6110 Series Hand Held Computer User s Guide Glossary 15 GLOSSARY SNMP Physically an access point to a computer multiplexer device or network Logically a pointer toa TCP IP application Port Replicator A device that provides connections for a number of devices such as keyboard serial peripheral radio antenna power and IrDA printer Portrait Mode In terms of the display it has an orientation such that the information displayed on the screen is viewed in a normal manner without rotating the image resulting in a narrow display POST Power On Self Test A set of routines for system diagnostics and configuration that is run by the BIOS during system initialization Programmer s Reference Guide The comprehensive repository of information about PEN KEY programming It is usually included with a PEN KEY Tool Kit Proprietary Systems Systems where all the component devices protocols and standards are from a single
33. e primary mouse button twice quickly to select an object with the pointer Primary is usually the left button Download The transmission of data from a host computer to a mobile computer DSD Direct Store Delivery That section of the grocery industry dealing with products delivered from a supplier directly to a store rather than to some intermediate warehouse or distributor DSD offers retailers reduced overhead expenses but carries as a cost a loss of inventory control DSR Data Set Ready An RS 232 modem interface control signal sent from the modem to the DTE on pin 6 that indicates the modem is connected to the telephone circuit DTE Data Terminal Equipment The devices in a category that includes terminals and computers Also refers to the interface to users equipment as opposed to the DCE interface to the network Glossary 4 6110 Series Hand Held Computer User s Guide GLOSSARY DTR Data Terminal Ready An RS 232 modem interface control signal sent from the DTE tothe modem on pin 20 that indicates the DTE is ready for data transmission and requests the modem be connected to the circuit EAN European Article Numbering Bar Code Symbology European Article Numbering Code A bar code symbology similar to the UPC symbology except that EAN contains 13 characters and uses the first two to identify a country EBCDIC Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange Code An 8 bit character code scheme used in IBM environ
34. ed so the ESC key is not processed until the next session is attempted 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide B 7 PEN KEY Utilities Program APPENDIX B BEGIN COMM SESSION with NETWORK If you select the communications option and Option 2 COMM SETTINGS is set to NETWORK this Commu nication Status menu appears PEN KEY UTILITIES COMMUNICATIONS COMM SETTINGS NRINET SERVER NAME CLIENT IP ADDRESS 0 0 0 0 ROUTER 0 0 0 0 SIGNING ON STATUS 20 ESC STOP COMM While SIGNING ON is onscreen STATUS may appear with the status of the attempted connection Refer to Session Status on page B 12 for meaning Following a successful session PEN KEY Utilities executes the downloaded application 1f the necessary program files are not found this message window appears MISSING SYSTEM FILES B 8 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide APPENDIX B PEN KEY Utilities Program If the session is unsuccessful LAST SESSION appears with the failure status such as T803 PEN KEY UTILITIES COMMUNICATIONS COMM SETTINGS NRINET SERVER NAME CLIENT IP ADDRESS 0 0 0 0 ROUTER 0 0 0 0 SIGNING ON STATUS 20 LAST SESSION T803 INVALID HOST NAME OR IP ADDRESS ESC STOP COMM 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide B 9 PEN KEY Utilities Program APPENDIX B BEGIN COMM SESSION with MODEM DIRECT If you select the communications option and Option 2 COMM SETTINGS is set to
35. ee Figure 2 11 Modem Card Connector Modem Cable Figure 2 11 Installing Modem Cable 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 2 15 Operation SECTION 2 Using the Magnetic Stripe Reader MSR To use the card reader simply sweep the card through the reader in either direction with the magnetic strip on the bottom of the card Figure 2 12 Using the Magnetic Stripe Reader 2 16 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide SECTION 2 Operation Installing the Subscriber Identity Module SIM 1 Remove the SIM cover from the hand held computer Tamper Proof Driver T p n 901 136 001 Phillips Screw a Proof Screw Cr use 0 bit QS Figure 2 13 Removing SIM Socket Cover 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 2 17 Operation SECTION 2 2 Cut away the SIM from the plastic card 3 Open the SIM socket by sliding the sleeve forward and swinging upward 4 Insert the SIM into the sleeve Close and secure by swinging it down and sliding the sleeve back to lock into place 5 Reattach the cover SIM on cutaway plas tic card SIM Socket Sleeve Figure 2 14 Installing SIM 2 18 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide Section 3 Routine Care and Maintenance Introduction Your Intermec 6110 Hand Held Computer is designed to withstand normal use in harsh environments Occasional maintenance is required to ensure trouble free operation The procedures in th
36. enu appears PHONE NUMBER 9 13193693282 DIALING PAUSE ENTJOK ESCIQUIT Enter up to 16 characters Use the lt SP key to back space use the CLR to reset to the previous phone num ber and press to insert a dialing pause command Press the ENT key to save the new phone number and return to the Communications Settings menu Press the ESC key to exit this pop up menu B 28 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide APPENDIX B PEN KEY Utilities Program Option 9 ADVANCED UTILITIES If you select this option the Advanced Utilities menu ap pears PEN KEY UTILITIES ADVANCED UTILITIES 1 SET DATE TIME 2 BATTERY STATUS Press the number of an advanced utility option or press the Y orB keys to scroll through thelist then press the ENT key to enter NOTE Suboption 4 FORMAT RAM CARD appears only if the FORMAT COM program is in the PATH 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide B 29 PEN KEY Utilities Program APPENDIX B Suboption 1 SET DATE TIME If you select this suboption the Set Date Time pop up menu appears DATE 01 20 80 TIME 23 12 04 Enter numbers for the month day year 1980 2079 hour minute and second up to 23 59 59 Press the ENT key after each entry An incorrect entry causes the computer to default to the initial number Press the ESC key to exit this pop up menu B 30 6110 Hand Held Comput
37. er User s Guide 6100 API Glossary A generic term for the 61XX members of the PEN KEY Hand Held Computer products Application Program Interface Application ADK ASYNC ATA Card Auto Panning Baud Rate Computer program used for a particular kind of work This term is used interchangeably with program Asynchronous communications A method of transmitting data using an external clocking source the transmitted characters are preceded by a start bit and followed by a stop bit A credit card sized device which has been specially designed to meet the needs of small computers and can be inserted and removed from a PC Card slot In the PEN KEY products it is generally a flash storage card modem radio etc See also Flash Card SanDisk Spinning Media or Hardcard The Auto Panning mode causes the display driver to automatically pan so the active window remains displayed inside the viewport See also Pan Border The speed at which information can be transferred 6110 Series Hand Held Computer User s Guide Glossary 1 GLOSSARY BISYNC Binary SYNChronous communications A method of transmitting data in which the transmission of a character is marked by a drop or rise in the signal An IBM defined byte controlled communications protocol using control characters and synchronized transmission of binary coded data Boot Default Drive Bootable ATA Bus network Button CD CD
38. fatermec Technologies Corporation 6110 Hand Held Computer USER S GUIDE PN 961 028 102 evision August 2000 NOTICE This publication contains information proprietary to Intermec Technologies Corpo ration It is being supplied to you with the express understanding that the informa tion contained herein is for the benefit of the contracting party only and may not be copied distributed or displayed to third parties without the express written consent of Intermec Technologies Corporation and shall be returned to Intermec Technologies Corporation upon written request If a purchase license or nondisclo sure agreement has been executed the terms of that agreement shall govern this document This publication is furnished for information only and the information in it is subject to change without notice Although every effort has been made to provide complete and accurate information Intermec Technologies Corporation assumes no responsibility or liability for any errors or inaccuracies that may appear in this document Disclaimer of Warranties The sample source code included in this document is presented for reference only The code does not necessarily represent complete tested programs The codeis provided AS IS WITH ALL FAULTS ALL WARRANTIES ARE EXPRESSLY DISCLAIMED INCLUDING THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FORA PARTICULAR PURPOSE We welcome your comments concerning this publication Althou
39. followed by up to nine additional options PEN KEY UTILITIES LANGUAGE SELECTION 1 ENGLISH OOO OL DURS Press the number of a language or press the Y or B keys to scroll through the list then press the ENT key to enter Press the ESC key to exit this menu 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide B 5 PEN KEY Utilities Program APPENDIX B Communications Menu NOTE The default is the NPCP RS 485 communication NOTE If your computer does not support any of the features listed the fol lowing pop up menu appears Press the ENT key to continue COMMUNICATIONS FEATURE NOT SUPPORTED The Communications Menu appears after the Title Screen PEN KEY UTILITIES COMMUNICATIONS 1 BEGIN COMM SESSION 2 COMM SETTING NRINET 3 UNIT ID 4 NETWORK PARAMETERS SERVER NAME CLIENT IP ADDRESS 0 0 0 0 ROUTER 0 0 0 0 SUBNET MASK 0 0 0 0 9 ADVANCED UTILITIES B 6 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide APPENDIX B PEN KEY Utilities Program Option 1 BEGIN COMM SESSION If you select Option 1 the computer repeats communica tions until successful or you press the ESC key NOTE If you press the ESC key this verification window appears ARE YOU SURE YOU WANT TO STOP COMMUNICATIONS NOW ENTISTOP ESCIRESUME NOTE This window may not appear immediately For most communication settings a session cannot be interrupted once it has start
40. gh every effort has been made to keep it free of errors some may occur When reporting a specific problem please describe it briefly and include the book title and part number as well as the paragraph or figure number and the page number Send your comments to Intermec Technologies Corporation Publications Department 550 Second Street SE Cedar Rapids IA 52401 INTERMEC NORAND PEN KEY PEN VIEW ROUTE COMMANDER and BEVERAGE ROUTEBOOK are registered trademarks and NOR WARE and RAPIDREP are trademarks of Intermec Technologies Corporation 1998 Intermec Technologies Corporation All rights reserved Acknowledgments Alexander is a registered trademark of Alexander Manufacturing Co Ethernet is a trademark of Xerox Corporation Microclean II is a registered trademark of Foresight International Microsoft MS and MS DOS and Windows are registered trademarks and Visual Basic for Windows and Windows for Pen are trademarks of Microsoft Corporation SanDisk is a trademark of SanDisk Corporation CONTENTS SECTION 1 General Information About This User s Guide Hand Held Computer Description Hand Held Computer Keyboard Hand Held Computer Display rer pe arg tee dl me tn Loges Battery sua eine Sel hate A date wis ns Hele es M MOrY sce siete pes tas re Halla ce Bie hg Hee Be as WAA Bien Gold Shift Key
41. hand held computer Memory cards are available in a variety of sizes and types Check with your Sales Representative or System Engineer for specific options Your computer is equipped with three PC card slots These slots can be used with memory cards for storage of data much like a floppy disk drive on a PC These slots can also be used for modems radios hard drives and other options as they become available Two of the PC card slots are version 2 0 Typell andthe other slot is an ATA card slot Type III cards can be installed but you sacrifice slot space The ATA and two PC slots have card guides but the empty bay on top does not Thereis no blockage between any of the slots so any pair of Type II bays can accommodate a Type II card A Type III ATA hard drive card can be installed in the ATA slot but it takes up the PC slot B bay space A Type III PC card installed in slot B takes up slot B and A and a Type III PC card installed in slot A takes up slot A and the empty bay 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 1 7 General Information SECTION 1 Empty Bay Slot A typically used for a radio card A RIRE Slot B typically L used for a modem card Slot C typically used for a hard drive card or a SanDisk flash ATA card Figure 1 4 PC Card Slots 1 8 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide SECTION 1 General Information Slot C Modem card Slot B Figure 1 5 PC Card Slot
42. have to send your unit in for reprogram ming Figure 1 10 GSM with SIM card 1 16 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide SECTION 1 General Information Size Temperature Operating Storage Weight Humidity Static Protection Power source Main battery Backup battery Charging rate 32 to 140 F 0 to 60 _C Communication Interface Protocol Hand Held Computer Specifications 8 1 inches 20 57 cm long 4 3 inches 10 92 cm wide 2 2 inches 5 59 cm tall 14 to 122 F 10 to 50 C 22 to 158 F 30 to 70 C 1 Ib 12 oz 793 79 g with battery 5 to 95 noncondensing 15 kV noncontact 8 kV contact 7 2 V 1500 mA hour lithium ion battery pack standard Two 3V 100 mA hour vanadium lithium battery standard Fast charge fully charge 2 5 hours 95 fully charged 1 5 hours RS 232 RS 485 and Infrared Norand Proprietary Communications Protocol NPCP Xmodem Y modem IrDA 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 1 17 General Information SECTION 1 System Components FLASH 512K FLASH array standard RAM 8 Megabytes standard 16 and 32 Megabytes optional Operating Win 95 System Card Options Processor Display Type Size One ATA PC card slot for system disk Type I or Type III card plus two PC card slots two Typell cards or one Type Il and one Type III card 99 MHz AMD Elan SC400 Quarter size VGA LCD CGA Controller with Ba
43. is section should help keep your hand held computer in good working condition Maintenance procedures included in this section provides instructions on identifying low battery conditions and cleaning your computer Low Battery Indication If you attempt to turn your hand held computer on and it does not respond this usually means the battery is run down J ust to be sure insert your computer in a dock or other charging device turn it ON and see if it responds 1f it does follow the instructions for Charging Your Battery Pack beginning on page 2 4 If it does not respond when inserted in the charging source another problem could ex ist Refer to the Troubleshooting section for solutions 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 3 1 Routine Care and Maintenance SECTION 3 Cleaning Your Hand Held Computer B CAUTION Periodic cleaning helps maintain the appearance and reli ability of your hand held computer When cleaning your computer inspect the keyboard covers display connectors and peripheral products for obvious signs of damage or wear Do not use any abrasive cleaning compounds ketonic solvents acetone or ketone or aromatic solvents toluene or xylene to clean any part of your computer These solutions will cause permanent damage Never pour cleaners directly on the display or the case Instead put the cleanser on a soft cloth and gently wipe the case Case and Display We recommend cleaning the exte
44. k received was incomplete Client and server negotiation failed Server specified an unsupported block size Invalid buffer pointer All server connections are already in use Try again later Timeout while sending data Connection to remote machine dropped Make sure the host is still running and check all cables and network connections Timeout while receiving data Connection to remote machine dropped Make sure the host is still running and check all cables and network connections An attempt to send data to the server failed due to a closed connection Ensure the server is still running check all cables and network connections An attempt to receive data from the server failed due to a closed connection Ensure the 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide B 15 PEN KEY Utilities Program 815 816 817 818 935 939 Q40 948 950 951 952 954 955 960 961 962 963 964 965 966 APPENDIX B server is still running check all cables and network connections Could not access the network attach information An error occurred reading the network attach information Server did not respond to the connect request Ensure the server is still running check all cables and network connections An error occurred reading the TCP IP kernel information Operation would block Destination address req
45. ments EDI Electronic Data Interchange Specifically EDI Standards The EDI Standards area collective group of standards of different industries used for exchanging data between computers All EDI Standards share certain basic concepts for formatting data There are EDI standards covering transportation warehousing grocery retail general merchandise retail general business and other industries EEPROM Electrically Erasable Programmable Read Only Memory EIA Electronics Industries Association A United States trade organization that issues its own standards and contributes to ASNI Best known for its development RS 232 and the building wiring standard 568 Membership includes US manufacturers EOF End Of File A constant following the last data in a file that signals its end EOT End Of Transmission or End Of Tape Ethernet A general term indicating both 802 3 and DIX Ethernet also called Ethernet 2 0 See also 802 3 6110 Series Hand Held Computer User s Guide Glossary 5 GLOSSARY ETX End Of Text A control character used to indicate the conclusion of a message Flash A technology for nonvolatile memory storage A special type of EEPROM that can be erased and reprogrammed Flash Card A memory storage PC Card that meets the ATA standard See also ATA Card SanDisk Spinning Media or Hardcard FSK Frequency Shift Keying A method of frequency modulation in which a binary 1 is sent as one freque
46. ncy and a 0 as another frequency Used in modems operating at 1200 bps or slower FTP File Transfer Protocol One of the protocols typically included as part of the TCP IP suite of protocols supported in most implementations of TCP IP FTP is a TCP IP based protocol for transferring files between different systems Function A collection of declarations and statements returning a value that can be called by name Function Prototype A function declaration that includes a list of names and types of formal parameters in the parentheses following the function name Gateway GW SNMP In current usage gateway and application gateway refer to translating systems that convert data traveling from one environment to another GPS Global Positioning System The Global Positioning System GPS is a satellite based positioning and navigation system that provides precise position velocity and time information Glossary 6 6110 Series Hand Held Computer User s Guide GLOSSARY GUI Graphical User Interface GUI PM Hardcard Heap ADK Provides a graphical representation of the environment which results in a simpler way to detect problem areas Also promotes uniformity in operating management applications which means greater management productivity An example is Network Manager from SUN Microsystems Graphical User Interface Presentation Manager A spinning media or PC Card hard drive that plugs intoa P
47. ng the battery Hand Held This is the correct operation the unit Computer Turns shuts down to conserve energy and OFF When You save data Open the Battery Door 4 4 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide SECTION 4 Troubleshooting Table 4 1 continued Basic Troubleshooting Condition Solution Hand Held 1 May not turn OFF when it is Computer Does connected toa charging device Not Turn OFF 2 May not turn OFF when it is processing data If either of these conditions continues for along period of time contact our support personnel as this will run down the batteries Hand Held 1 Ensure that full contact is made in Computer the dock try reseating computer in Displays A Bad dock TCOM Message 2 Ensure there is a good connection between the dock and the host Hand Held Computer Takes A Long Time To Boot Up After A Reset Normal time is between 30 45 seconds If longer than this may need to contact our support personnel If these basic solutions do not solve your problem there could be a number of reasons Additional things to do are Refer to the software documentation written for your application This documentation contains trouble shooting information Contact the Customer Support Specialist at your Cus tomer Service Center Your regional Customer Service Center is fully staffed and equipped to repair your hand held computer Customer Support Center ad dresses and telephone numbers a
48. o enter Suboption 1 MODEM TYPE If you select this suboption a drop down list appears with supported modem types Press theY or B keys to scroll through the list then press the ENT button to enter 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide B 23 PEN KEY Utilities Program APPENDIX B NOTE NOTE If you select drop option OTHER EXTERNAL or OTHER INTERNAL the Modem Init String pop up menu appears MODEM INIT STRING ATEOVOQO amp M0 amp S1 amp C1 amp D2 amp R QXOL1 F2ITEST STRING ENT O ESCIQUIT a Enter theinitialization string of the modem you are using Refer to your modem s reference manual for information Use A and keys on numeric keyboards to scroll the alphanumeric character set If you leave this menu blank a string is not saved b Press the ENT key to enter the string or press ESC to exit this pop up menu B 24 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide APPENDIX B PEN KEY Utilities Program NOTE Testing the modem initialization string is optional To test the modem string do the following a Press the F2 key The computer replies with PLEASE WAIT and tests the string MODEM INIT STRING ATEOVOQO amp M0 amp S1 amp C1 amp D2 amp R QXOL1 PLEASE WAIT F2 TEST STRING ENTJOK ESC QUIT Momentarily the computer displays the modem s response MODEM INIT STRING ATEOVOQO0 amp M0 amp S1 amp C1 amp D2 amp R QXOL1 RESULT 97
49. r a system built by another company On Key This key is found on some units It will not turn the unit On or Off but it will suspend resume operation Glossary 12 6110 Series Hand Held Computer User s Guide Open Systems GLOSSARY Comprises protocols and components that meet standards set by industry accepted governing bodies The standards ensure that when new protocols and components are introduced into an existing system they will meet the standards and be able to communicate with the existing system The OSI model is the basis for a system to communicate with any other system The model is a framework of standards that create protocol stacks and applications for networking applications Open Wireless LAN Node Os Pan Border Any access point or wireless station that connects to the network using the 900 MHz or synthesized UHF radio option Operating system An invisible border that extends inward from the edges of the physical display providing an easy means of panning See also Auto Panning PC Personal Computer PC Card 1 A desktop computer developed by IBM or a clone based on the same architecture developed by a third party vendor 2 Sometimes used more generically to refer to other desktop systems such as the Apple Macintosh 3 The original IBM computer using an Intel 8088 CPU and an 8 bit internal bus A device that fits in the card slots of an Intermec or other computer In some PEN
50. r encountered File error encountered Telecommunications aborted before first file header received The three digit number 289 indicates the specific proto col error These error codes apply when COMM SETTINGS is set to NPCP RS 485 or NPCP RS 232 o No error 1 MININET EXE not installed 6 User aborted communications by pressing ESC 11 Invalid parameter specified in control file NOTE The following values indicate an error returned by MININET EXE 100 is added to the error returned by MININET EXE to avoid conflict with other defined errors 101 103 105 106 108 1909 110 111 113 114 115 117 118 legal buffer length Invalid command Command timed out Message incomplete legal local session number No resource available Session closed Command canceled Duplicate name in local name table Nametableis full Nameis deregistered command complete Local session table full Session open rejected B 12 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide APPENDIX B 119 120 121 122 1123 1124 1125 1126 133 134 135 136 138 PEN KEY Utilities Program Invalid name number No answer Name not found Name in use on remote adapter Name deleted Session ended abnormally Name conflict Incompatible remote device Network interface is busy Too many
51. re printed on a Prod uct Service Information card This document is packed with all our products 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 4 5 Troubleshooting SECTION 4 Repair Service Be sure to carefully pack the unit and include a description of the problem and the measures you took to correct it If possible include any printout if applicable or write down displayed error messages to illustrate the problem 4 6 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide Appendix A Connector Pin Outs 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide A 1 Connector Pin Outs APPENDIX A 8 Pin Docking Connector Signal Function BCLK Battery Clock 12 0 Volts Power GND Ground BDAT Battery Data TXD Transmit for Serial Port RXD Receive for Serial Port RTS Ready To Send for serial port CTS Clear To Send for serial port NN OUI BR W N Figure A 1 Docking Connector Pin Outs A 2 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide APPENDIX A Connector Pin Outs RJ 45 Phone J ack Pin Outs J1 Receptacle 12 GND Phone J ack DCD RXD TXD DTR PWR DSR RTS CTS RI OO INIO U A WIN e bh Oo O IN Om BR W IN e FigureA 2 Phone J ack Pin Outs 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide A 3 Connector Pin Outs APPENDIX A A 4 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide Appendix B PEN KEY Utilities Program The PEN KEY Utilities Program provides basic func
52. ress In each case the remainder is the host address In the Internet assigned network addresses are globally unique See also Internet IP address subnet address host address In NetWare the unique number assigned to each logical node of the network 6110 Series Hand Held Computer User s Guide Glossary 11 GLOSSARY NMSD NORAND Mobile Systems Division of Intermec Technologies Corporation Norlib Tool Kit A NORAND application tool kit for C C programmers DOS based Includes a large C class library Supports 4000 Series Hand Held Computers and 61XX 62XX 63XX and 66XX PEN KEY Computers NOS Network Operating System Provides many of the services that are distributed throughout the network to the various servers Typically provides the following services print file and database messaging communication and network management NPCP NORAND Portable Communications Protocol NPCP a NORAND proprietary protocol provides session network and datalink services for NORAND HHCs in the NORAND LAN environment used with printers and data communications NRINET A NORAND protocol that transfers data over TCP IP NULL A constant valued at zero Null Modem Baud Rate The speed of the modem connection Null Modem Device Name The name of the communication port for example COM 1 AUX2 HOST3 or DIGI 4 OEM Original Equipment Manufacturer A term that identifies certain hardware vendors who produce PC hardware fo
53. resume op eration press the I O key Additionally pressing the re lease button on the battery pack door forces a suspend This protects against losing data when removing the battery pack 1 10 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide SECTION 1 General Information Serial Ports Optional DB9 pod Optional RS 232 subset through the DEX connector Optional RS 232 through RJ 45 jack in top of computer IrDA partial serial port through IR lens Resetting In the rare event that your hand held computer fails to re spond to your input it may be necessary to reset To reset press the Gold shift Ctrl Alt keys at the same time hold the keys down for three seconds and your computer will reboot Options and Accessories Radio Card Your hand held computer can be ordered with a radio card Using a radio card allows you to operate in a mobile envi ronment and have real time interaction with a host comput er The radio card slides into either PC card slot A or B see page 2 11 for installation and location detail 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 1 11 General Information SECTION 1 Integrated Scanner Pod A WARNING Do not point the scanner at someone s eyes or look directly into it when scanning A ave RTISSEMENT Ne regardez pas la fen tre du scanner lorsque vous effectuez une scann risation Ne pointez jamais le rayon laser vers les yeux de quelqu un Scanner Trigger Integrated Laser S
54. rior of your hand held com puter using a soft cloth dampened with MICRO CLEAN II cleanser made by Foresight International Inc 4887 F Street Omaha NE 68127 0205 Docking Connectors If docking connector contacts become dirty or tarnished clean them with a cotton swab dipped in alcohol It may also be necessary to lightly burnish them with a pencil eras er 3 2 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide Section 4 Troubleshooting Introduction Should you encounter difficulties in routine operation printing or communications there are a few things you may be able to do to correct the problem Refer to your applications software user manual for printing and telecommunication procedures Ensure that electrical and mechanical connections are secure and undamaged 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 4 1 Troubleshooting SECTION 4 Troubleshooting Chart This Troubleshooting table lists conditions you might see and offers some basic remedies Table 4 1 Basic Troubleshooting Condition Solution Low Battery Recharge the main battery pack Bad TCOM 1 Review and retry communications procedures 2 Check cable connections Does Not Check to ensure that the dock is Respond To plugged in and hand held computer Power is making good contact Hand Held 1 Ensure that there is a main Computer Will battery in the computer Not Turn ON 2 The battery door may not be closed When The I O completel y Ke
55. ry and move to the next field If you have a numeric keyboard usetheA and keys to scroll back and forth through the given set of alphanumeric characters After a character is selected press the ENT key to enter that character Press ENT again to move to the next field PresstheY or B keys to move between fields Press ENT to save the entries and exit the Network Pa rameters menu Press the ESC key to exit without sav ing the entries B 22 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide APPENDIX B PEN KEY Utilities Program NETWORK PARAMETERS with NOVELL NETWARE If you select this option and Option 2 COMM SETTINGS is set to NOVELL NETWARE this frame type drop down list appears 1 802 2 2 ETHERNET Il 3 802 3 RAW 4 802 2 W SNAP Press the number of a frame type or press the Y or B keys to scroll through the list and press the ENT key to enter Press the ESC key to exit this drop down list without changing the frame type Option 4 MODEM PARAMETERS Modem Parameters appears as Option 4 when Option 2 COMM SETTINGS is set to MODEM DIRECT If you select this option the Modem Parameters pop up menu appears MODEM PARAMETERS 1 MODEM TYPE NM2400 NM2400A 2 PROTOCOL TTY 3 BPS RATE 2400 4 DATA FORMAT 8N1 5 AUTO ANSWER ESC ESC DONE Press the number of a modem parameters option or press the Y or B keys to scroll through the list then press the ENT button t
56. s When a card is installed the top label of the card faces up ward per the orientation shown in Figure 1 5 Slot C ATA slot must always have a mass storage device to serve as the system disk C This can be a SanDisk flash memory card or a rotating hard disk drive The system will not oper ate without this disk present 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 1 9 General Information SECTION 1 Slots A and B aretrue PC card slots and can accommodate a variety of pc cards such as modems radios or additional mass storage A special factory installed option involves a serial interface radio card example Motorola Series 500 Radio for use in slot A This type of card does not have PC interface there fore it cannot be inserted all the way into the connector at the back of the bay A special bracket holds the card in place and the serial interface is attached via a flex cable NOTE Section 2 page 2 11 shows you how to install the PC cards Gold Shift Key Hold down and press desired gold shifted key functions Continue to hold down the GOLD key for each shifted key stroke you wish to make I O Suspend and Resume Key In order to conserve power your hand held computer may automatically suspend when there has been no activity for a set period of time This time is determined by the configu ration program To force a suspend press the key defined as the suspend key and hold the key down for three seconds To
57. se key until you achieve the desired level Of course this will depend on if these keys have not been pro grammed for other functions Backlight Your hand held computer display and keyboard comes equipped with a backlight Backlighting provides a great benefit in dark conditions Backlighting does however reduce battery life therefore turn off the backlight when done using To turn the backlight on press the gold Shift key and the 3 key To turn the backlight off press gold Shift and the 3 key again The amount of time the backlight stays on before shutting itself off is set and controlled through the Config uration Program Battery NOTE Itis important to charge your hand held computer for at least 14 hours before you use it the first time This ensures that both the backup battery and the main battery pack are fully charged This hand held computer uses a 1500 mA hour lithium ion rechargeable main battery pack Your hand held computer can check battery capacity by various methods One the battery pack has four LEDs that will display remaining ca 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 1 5 General Information SECTION 1 pacity when two of the contacts are touched at the same time More on this in Section 2 on page 2 9 A second meth od is to use a software fuel gauge based on the APM 1 1 specification If your hand held computer goes into a shutdown mode be cause of low battery condition data is protected by
58. speed of the modem connection The higher the number the faster the rate Modem Device Name The name of the communications port for example COM 1 AUX2 HOST3 or DIGI4 Modem Settings The command strings required by your modem Glossary 10 6110 Series Hand Held Computer User s Guide GLOSSARY MQL Multi Quad Lockbox Multi quad lockboxes are used for ADCCP communications with 121 141 HHCs MS DOS Microsoft Disk Operating System A master control program for 16 bit Intel based system One of the more common operating systems on PC systems NAK Negative Acknowledgement Response to receipt of a corrupted packet of information Native Mode ADK A command set for asynchronous communication NORAND command set compatible among previous generations of NORAND RF equipment Network A computer data communications system which interconnects computer systems at various sites A network may include any combination of LANs MANs or WANs See also LAN WAN internet ADK A computer network or terminals connected by means of wires or radio transmissions using software that enables them to exchange information Network Address SNMP In TCP IP the network portion of an IP address For a class A network the network address is the first byte of the IP address For a class B network the network address is the first two bytes of the IP address For a dass C network the network address is the first three bytes of the IP add
59. the backup battery Your computer contains two 100 mA hour vanadium lithium backup batteries The backup battery charges itself from the main pack or a charging source so it is constantly ready to take over data protection This user s guide will occasionally use the term cycles when presenting rechargeable battery instructions Cycles are the number of times the rechargeable battery pack can be charged and discharged during the life of battery The Lithium lon rechargeable battery design used in the main pack should give you approximately 500 cycles of use There are no guarantees on this number because it depends greatly on how the battery pack is used and cared for Memory Three types of memory are available with this computer Main Memory DRAM Flash ROM PC Cards Main Memory Standard main memory DRAM configuration is 8 mega bytes MB this can be extended to 16 or 32 MBs Main memory was ordered at the time your unit was purchased You are able to upgrade to a larger memory size by having a new memory board installed at your Customer Support Center The main memory is protected by the backup battery dur ing low main battery conditions or when the main battery pack is removed 1 6 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide SECTION 1 EXAMPLE General Information Flash ROM Flash ROM stores the BIOS and BIOS extensions for your hand held computer PC Cards Different brands of PC cards can be used in your
60. the Norand Mobile Systems Division of Intermec Technologies Corporation contact Customer Response Center at 800 755 5505 U S A or Canada or 425 356 1799 If this modem is not from the Norand Mobile Systems Division con tact your modem supplier These error codes apply when COMM SETTINGS is set to NOVELL NETWARE g No error 6 User aborted communications by pressing ESC key 100 Connection to host failed Verify network connection verify that PENKEY login name exists on host 101 Could not access include file Verify existence of include file on host 102 Could not allocate needed memory B 14 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide APPENDIX B PEN KEY Utilities Program These error codes apply when COMM SETTINGS is set to NRINET Q 6 800 801 802 803 804 806 807 810 S11 812 813 814 No error User aborted communications by pressing ESC key PC TCP IP kernel is missing Invalid client IP address Make sure the entry for CLIENT IP ADDRESS is correct or make sure the DHCP server is running Invalid Service or Service Type or invalid port number Invalid host name or IP Address Make sure the entry for SERVER NAME is correct and that the server is running Could not create socket Check all cables and network connections Block sent was incomplete or bloc
61. tions required to prepare your Hand Held Computers for use Entry Point PEN KEY UTILITIES PSROMOC Vx xx COPYRIGHT 1994 1999 INTERMEC Key Description TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ENTICONTINUE Screen Title This screen appears after cold booting the computer Screen Title dark bar at the top contains the application name such as PEN KEY UTILITIES and the specific screen name such as MODEM PARAMETERS Key Description dark bar at the bottom contains action keys Movement keys such as arrows are not shown Pop Up Menus Pop Up menus appear after a menu option Press the num ber of an option you want to select or press the Y or B 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide B 1 PEN KEY Utilities Program APPENDIX B CHANGE UNIT ID UNIT ID 2233233 WORKGROUP 6200IPL F4JRESET FACTORY ESCIQUIT keys to scroll through thelist and press the ENT key to enter Select one option each time Press the ESC key to exit a pop up menu Drop Down Lists 1 NETWORK 2 MODEM DIRECT 3 ACCESSORY CARD 4 HANDHELD 5 REMOTE OPS 6 INTERSERVER Drop down lists provide suboptions for a pop up menu Press the number of a suboption or press theY or B keys to scroll through the list and press the ENT key to enter Select one suboption each time Press the ESC key to exit a drop down list B 2 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guid
62. tus LED on the external charging device used for charging the battery packs informs you of the status of the battery pack The Charging Status LED reads Continuous red for charging Continuous green when done charging Blinking red when there is a bad connection Lift the pack out and reseat If it still blinks call Customer Service 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 4 3 Troubleshooting SECTION 4 Table 4 1 continued Basic Troubleshooting Condition Hand Held Computer Will Not Power Up Screen is Blank Solution 1 Main and Backup Battery are Critically Low 2 Ensure that your computer has been on a charger for at least five RS 485 Network minutes then remove from the dock Does Not Work and preform the reset procedure The display will then be active 3 Continue to charge your computer for at least 14 hours to ensure both the main and backup batteries are fully charged After this initial charge the normal time for the main battery pack to charge is about 2 1 2 hours Hand Held 1 Ensure the dock is plugged in Computer Will 2 Ensure that there is a main Not Turn ON battery in your hand held computer When Placed In A Dock 3 Ensure the battery door is completely closed Hand Held 1 You may have hit the battery door Computer Shuts Down During latch this will cause your computer to suspend Check the latch Operation 2 You may havea very low battery try rechargi
63. tween data terminal equipment DTE and data circuit terminating equipment DCE with serial binary data interchange RS 422 A Recommended Standard 422 An electrical interface using a 40 pin connector and balanced line voltage for long distance capability 6110 Series Hand Held Computer User s Guide Glossary 17 GLOSSARY RTC Real Time Control Protocol ADK A sophisticated multiplexing system using contention rules to open communication yielding faster and more efficient use of the radio channel RTS Request To Send or Ready To Send A modem control signal on a standard RS 232 C connector that puts the modem in originate mode to start sending data RXD Received Data SanDisk A brand of flash memory card See also ATA Card Flash Card Spinning Media or Hardcard Scroll To move through text or graphics up down left or right to see parts of the window not shown onscreen Serial Interface An interface in which the terminal or computer sends single bits of information to the other device one after another Serial Lid A cap for the 6100 Computer which contains various communications capabilities Set SNMP A basic SNMP PDU operation that lets a management station tell an agent to change a value that agent stores A way to manipulate management information SG Signal ground Single Frequency If a wireless station is using a single frequency it operates on the selected frequency in a list of frequencies Th
64. uired Message too long Address already in use Network is down Network is unreachable Network dropped connection or reset Connection reset by peer No buffer space available Connection timed out Connection refused Too many levels of symbolic links File name is too long Host is down Host is unreachable Directory not empty B 16 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide APPENDIX B PEN KEY Utilities Program These error codes apply when COMM SETTINGS is set to TFTP Q ay 6 100 101 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 Noerror PSROBOC EXE could not be loaded User aborted communications by pressing ESC key TCP IP kernel is missing Invalid client IP address Ensure the entry for CLIENT IP ADDRESS is correct or ensure the DHCP server is running TFTP EXE failed TFTP EXE not found Unknown server Remote file name is invalid Local file name is invalid File not found on server Timeout Option 2 COMM SETTING If you select this option the Communications Settings drop down list appears 1 NETWORK 2 MODEM DIRECT 3 ACCESSORY CARD 4 HANDHELD 5 REMOTE OPS 6 INTERSERVER Press the number of a communications settings or press theY orB keys to scroll through thelist then press the ENT key to enter 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide B 17 PEN KEY Utilities Program APPENDIX B
65. urs Figure 2 1 Installing Main Battery Pack 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 2 3 Operation SECTION 2 Charging The Batteries Charging your battery pack can be done either in your hand held computer or in a charger The following devices provide charge to the batteries while they are connected to your computer In Your Hand Held Computer AC adapter Auto adapter Single dock Multidock Vehicle dock The multidock single dock and vehicle dock installation and instructions are contained in a separate publication 6100 Series Dock Installation Instructions PN 962 020 003 2 4 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide SECTION 2 Operation Power Status LED NORAND 7 H PLE i i ia Ooo on oS S n S S en Charging Status Blinking Red indicates low battery status Continuous Red indicates charging in process Continuous Green indicates charging complete Blinking Green indicates computer is in standby mode Off indicates normal operation Figure 2 2 Power Status LED 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide 2 5 Operation SECTION 2 In External Source When your battery pack is placed in a multipack or single pack charger the dock will indicate the charge state red charging green fully charged blinking red bad battery or bad connection Figure 2 3 shows a multipack charger and Figure
66. wee 2 11 BOOUING oh nce mean Sua Seay ann eee 2 11 BIOS Update 2 11 Installing PC Cards 2 11 Removing PC Cards 2 13 Installing a Modem Card 2 14 Using the Magnetic Stripe Reader MSR 2 16 Installing the Subscriber Identity Module SIM 2 17 SECTION 3 Routine Care and Maintenance MEFOGUCEION 22 LL ota aire tate ty Wana SP rene eae 3 1 Low Battery Indication 3 1 Cleaning Your Hand Held Computer 3 2 Case and Display 3 2 Docking Connectors 3 2 SECTION 4 Troubleshooting AE FOMUCHION 524 Lite rm vate dre ia 4 1 Troubleshooting Chart 4 2 Repair Service 4 6 ii 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide CONTENTS APPENDIX A Connector Pin Outs 8 Pin Docking Connector A 2 RJ 45 Phone J ack Pin Outs A 3 APPENDIX B PEN KEY Utilities Program Entry Pownnt Hp mon gird ban bauer pede B 1 Pop Up MENUS sure au alee ew tte ee eel ae ee B 1 Drop Down Lists B 2 Alphanumeric Fields B 3 Title Screen 20 B 4 Language Selection
67. y Is Pressed 3 The main battery may be low and need recharging As The Battery Lithium lon batteries will lose half of Pack Ages It Is their available capacity after about Losing Capacity and Fewer LEDs 500 cycles use and recharge 1 cycle Therefore a fully charged are lighting battery pack will show fewer than four lit LEDs this is normal Either replace the battery pack or plan your charging needs accordingly and note that the capacity will continue to decrease with each cycle Battery Does Not 1 Charge battery pack then recheck Light Any Of The 2 Replace battery pack if needed LEDs 4 2 6110 Hand Held Computer User s Guide SECTION 4 Troubleshooting Table 4 1 continued Basic Troubleshooting Condition Solution Hand Held The printer may be running off Computer Will battery power The printer does not Not Turn ON charge the battery in your computer When Inserted In when it is running off battery power A Printer itself The Power The Power Status LED on the front Status LED panel of your hand held computer Starts Blinking informs you of the status of your battery pack when it is connected to a charging device The Power Status LED reads Off when in a normal operating mode Blinking red when the battery is low Continuous red when charging Continuous green when done charging Blinking green when in a standby mode The Charger Status LED Starts Blinking The Charger Sta
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