Europe – EU Declaration of Conformity

This device complies with the essential requirements of the R&TTE Directive 1999/5/EC. The following test methods have been applied in order to prove presumption of compliance with the R&TTE Directive 1999/ 5/EC:

• EN 60950: 2000

Safety of Information Technology Equipment

• EN 300 328-2 V1.4.1 (2003-04)

Technical requirements for spread-spectrum radio equipment

• EN 301 489-1/-17 V1.4.1/1.2.1 (2002-08)

EMC requirements for spread-spectrum radio equipment.

This device is a 2.4 GHz wireless LAN transceiver, intended for indoor home and office use in all EU and EFTA member states.

Bluetooth™ Networking Overview

In order to exchange data, two Bluetooth enabled devices must establish a connection. Bluetooth software is always running in the background, ready to respond to connection requests. One device (known as the master or the client) must request a connection with another. The second device (the slave or the server) then accepts or rejects the connection. A Bluetooth enabled QL 320 will normally act as a slave, but in theory any Bluetooth device can be either a master or a slave. This miniature network is sometimes referred to as a “piconet” and can consist of several Bluetooth enabled devices.

Each Bluetooth enabled Cameo printer has a unique Bluetooth Device Address (BDA) loaded into its radio module when manufactured. For the most part, communications using the Bluetooth protocol are initiated and processed without any operator intervention, much like the IrDA system described previously.

O-21

UMAN-CM2/3