315. MessagingYou can create, send, receive, view, edit, and organize text messages, multimediamessages, e-mail messages, presentations, and documents. You can also receivemessages and data using Bluetooth wireless technology, receive and forwardpicture messages, receive service messages and cell broadcast messages, and sendservice commands.To open the Messaging menu, select Menu > Messaging. You can see the Newmessage function and a list of default folders:Inbox—contains received messages except e-mail and cell broadcastmessages. E-mail messages are saved in the Mailbox folder. To read cell broadcastmessages, select Options > Cell broadcast.My folders—for organizing your messages into foldersMailbox—for connecting to your remote mailbox to retrieve your new e-mailmessages or viewing your previously retrieved e-mail messages offline. After youdefine settings for a new mailbox, the name given to that mailbox is displayedinstead of Mailbox.Drafts—saves draft messages that have not been sent.Sent—saves the messages that are sent, excluding messages sent usingBluetooth.Outbox—temporarily saves the messages waiting to be sent.Reports (network service)—saves the delivery reports of the text messages,special message types such as business cards, and multimedia messages you havesent. Receiving a delivery report of a multimedia message that has been sent to ane-mail address may not be possible.■ Write and send messagesYour device supports the sending of text messages beyond the character limit for a singlemessage. Longer messages are sent as a series of two or more messages. Your serviceprovider may charge accordingly. Characters that use accents or other marks, and charactersfrom some language options, take up more space, limiting the number of characters that canbe sent in a single message.The wireless network may limit the size of MMS messages. If the inserted picture exceedsthis limit, the device may make it smaller so that it can be sent by MMS.