Regulatory notices – Dell Latitude C600 User Manual

Page 145

Advertising
background image

Back to Contents Page

Regulatory Notices: Dell™ Latitude™ C600/C500 User's

Guide

Overview

Polish Center for Testing and Certification Notice

FCC Notices (U.S. Only)

Wymagania Polskiego Centrum Badan i Certyfikacji

IC Notice (Canada Only)

Pozostale instrukcje bezpieczenstwa

CE Notice (European Union)

NOM Information (Mexico Only)

Battery Disposal

Información para NOM (únicamente para México)

EN 55022 Compliance (Czech Republic Only)

BSMI Notice (Taiwan Only)

VCCI Notice (Japan Only)

CE Mark Notice

MIC Notice (Republic of Korea Only)

New Zealand Telecom Warnings

Overview

Electromagnetic Interference (EMI) is any signal or emission, radiated in free space or conducted along
power or signal leads, that endangers the functioning of a radio navigation or other safety service or seriously
degrades, obstructs, or repeatedly interrupts a licensed radio communications service. Radio
communications services include but are not limited to AM/FM commercial broadcast, television, cellular
services, radar, air-traffic control, pager, and Personal Communication Services (PCS). These licensed
services, along with unintentional radiators such as digital devices, including computers, contribute to the
electromagnetic environment.

Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) is the ability of items of electronic equipment to function properly
together in the electronic environment. While this computer has been designed and determined to be
compliant with regulatory agency limits for EMI, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a
particular installation. If this equipment does cause interference with radio communications services, which
can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, you are encouraged to try to correct the interference
by one or more of the following measures:

Reorient the receiving antenna.

Relocate the computer with respect to the receiver.

Move the computer away from the receiver.

Plug the computer into a different outlet so that the computer and the receiver are on different branch
circuits.

Advertising