With 4S Now Tops Among Big 3, Apple Grabs 52% Of Industry Profits; Doles Out Huge Bonuses

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As you’ve likely heard, there’s been a lot of upside that’s been reported of late when it comes to Android’s mobile OS. Thanks to Nielsen, we know that, yet again, Android is leader among mobile OSes, now accounting for 43 percent of U.S. smartphone marketshare, up from 39 percent in July; while Apple’s iOS remained at 28 percent over the same period, placing it in distant second.

Of course, Apple has a little bit of vertical integration going on, and in spite of their lagging well behind Google in mobile software market share, iPhones are used by a full 28 percent of smartphone customers, making them top manufacturer for yet another quarter. Hardware leans significantly in Apple’s favor.

So, while the iPhone made up a relatively small 4.2 percent of the mobile handsets shipped in Q3 2011, it seems that Apple is now accounting for over half of the industry’s profits. Yep. According to Canaccord Genuity analyst Mike Walkley, of the top eight cell phone vendors across the globe, Apple owns over 52 percent of the total operating income. And while that may seem impressive, that number is down from 57 percent in the second quarter.

In comparison, Samsung owns 29 percent of profits among the top vendors, up from 18 percent last quarter, while HTC accounts for 9 percent, RIM comes in at 7 percent, with Nokia at 4 percent. Though Apple’s 52 percent share of the operating profits of the top eight vendors is impressive in spite of the relatively small percentage of iPhones shipped, Samsung’s meteoric rise is certainly worthy of note.

According to Walkley, Samsung gained 11 points of value share thanks largely in part to the Android Galaxy S II, while RIM and Nokia continued to slip. Of course, while most groan over RIM’s future, at least Nokia is making a play at Windows Phone, hoping that its play into the U.S. market can turn a sinking ship around.

That being said, the analyst (and firm) found that Apple’s new iPhone 4S was the top selling phone for AT&T, Sprint, and Verizon (the three largest carriers in the U.S.), with the iPhone 4 — in spite of its next-in-line now being sold — remaining a top selling model for each of those carriers. As 9to5Mac says, the phones get older, the margins seem to get better. And with the popularity of these phones increasing, Walkley projects that Apple may ship as many as 29 million iPhone handsets in Q4 2011.

And that’s not all, as this succession of SEC filings shows, Apple’s executives are now reaping the rewards of a strong fiscal year (in which the company passed the $100 billion mark in revenue). The company awarded 1 million shares of stock to seven top execs, which will see bloated wallets for those of that remain with the company through 2016. The recently promoted SVP of Internet Software and Services Eddy Cue received 100,000 shares of stock in the form of a restricted stock units. 25 percent of Cue’s shares turn into freely tradable stock in September 2014, with the remainder vesting in September 2016.

Each of the remaining six executives received 150,000 shares of restricted stock, with 50 percent vesting in June of 2013 and the remainder vesting in March of 2016. Based on the current price of Apple stock, that works out to a payday of approximately $60 million each for the execs who received the 150,000 shares. (Which includes: Scott Forstall, Senior Vice President, iOS Software, Bob Mansfield, Senior Vice President, Hardware Engineering, Peter Oppenheimer, Senior Vice President and CFO, Phil Schiller, Senior Vice President, Worldwide Product Marketing, Bruce Sewell, Senior Vice President and General Counsel, and Jeff Williams, Senior Vice President, Operations.)

While Apple’s new CEO Tim Cook wasn’t mentioned in these new filings, he was awarded 1 million shares of stock upon his appointment as CEO, with 50 percent vesting in August 2016 and the remainder vesting in August 2021 (should Cook remain an employee of Apple).

So, while Google continues to rise in mobile software, it seems that thanks to Apple’s hardware and its dominance around the world thanks to the iPhone 4 (and now the 4S), both Apple and its executives are cashing out.

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/11/05/with-4s-now-tops-among-big-3-apple-grabs-52-of-industry-profits-doles-out-huge-bonuses/

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DragonWave Buys Part Of Nokia Siemens Networks, Gains 360 Employees

nsnDragonWave this morning announced plans to acquire Nokia Siemens Networks’ microwave transport business, including its associated operational support systems and related support functions.

The move turns DragonWave into a strategic supplier of packet microwave and related products to Nokia Siemens Networks, and the companies state they will “jointly coordinate technology development activities”.

DragonWave and NSN hope the deal will allow for the birth of the next generation of backhaul products, supporting microwave solutions for mobile operators all across the globe.

The consideration paid by DragonWave on closing will include approximately 10 million euros in cash and 5 million euros worth of DragonWave common shares, although earn-out payments could raise the value of the transaction by approximately 80 million euros down the line.

DragonWave expects to finance the transaction through a combination of cash on its balance sheet and increased debt facilities.

As part of the acquisition, the companies expect approximately 360 Nokia Siemens Networks employees, mainly based in Milan (Italy) and Shanghai (China) to transfer to DragonWave.

The acquisition is expected to close in Q1 2012.

Nokia and Siemens have been trying to sell their joint venture, which was originally formed in 2007, for some time now, but it looks like it’s having a tough time convincing anyone to swallow it whole. Perhaps the new strategy is to sell it in chunks.

Source: http://techcrunch.com/2011/11/04/dragonwave-buys-part-of-nokia-siemens-networks-gains-360-employees/

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Nokia Lumia 800: Stephen Elop and Keven Shields design thoughts from Nokia World 2011

Nokia World 2011 may be over and the Nokia Lumia 800 clearly on its way but the effects of the show are still rattling around and causing much debate. Here we look at 10 thoughts on design that were raised at Nokia World 2011.

When Stephen Elop, Nokia CEO, stated at Nokia World 2011 that the ‘Lumia is the first REAL Windows Phone’ he was talking about it being the first piece of hardware that really matched the poer and grace of the operating system.

Nokia Lumia 800: 10 things we already love

Elop spoke a great deal about deal and how form must follow function, even to the extent that Nokia looked to one of the greatest Finnish architects ever, Alvar Aalto, for inspiration and elegance. The idea that ‘Lumia form follows function and maintains Nokia’s long line of beautifully designed phones’, can be seen as much as in what Nokia chose to leave out as it packed into the Nokia Lumia 800.

If Stephen Elop spoke about grace and design, it was left to Kevin Shields, senior vice president of Mobile Smart Devices, to talk a little more frankly, especially with his opening gambit that the Nokia Lumia 800 is ‘a beauty on the outside; [while] it’s a beast on the inside’

Shields went on to discuss the fact that the Nokia Lumia 800 comes free with Drive. ‘it’s the only Windows Phone to come with free turn-by-turn navigation. You can download and install maps prior to trip or if you drive off map then it will download what you need to get you where you’re going.’

Looking at other features, the Nokia Lumia 800 packs in Nokia Music and  Mix Radio. ‘It’s an effortless way of getting great music that is stored online so you can just tap into it. What’s more, if there is one you like, then you can download and listen to them offline.’ It’s a nice way to get music on your smartphone without having to try to hard, ‘I don’t know how to make music any easier!’ said Shields.

Elop ended his keynote stating that ‘Lumia is light, it’s a new dawn for Nokia’ before going on to mention that things will certainly get more interesting with time. After all, the Nokia Lumia 800 is merely the start of what will be a long trend of Windows Phone devices to come!

One of the most interesting ideas around design that emerged from the keynote came towards the end when it was discussed that the marketing campaign would focus on the enthusiastic 25-year old market. That’s not saying only this age group is being targeted, but the 25-year old in each of us, the person open to new experiences, users who want to experience everything for themselves, to discover ‘The Amazing Every Day’.

What do you think, is the Nokia Lumia 800 the dawn of a new day for Nokia and is this the smartphone you want to discover the amazing every day with? Let us know your thoughts in the Comments below.

Source: http://www.noknok.tv/2011/11/03/nokia-lumia-800-stephen-elop-and-keven-shields-design-thoughts-from-nokia-world-2011/

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Nokia Lumia 800: Stephen Elop and Keven Shields design thoughts from Nokia World 2011

Nokia World 2011 may be over and the Nokia Lumia 800 clearly on its way but the effects of the show are still rattling around and causing much debate. Here we look at 10 thoughts on design that were raised at Nokia World 2011.

When Stephen Elop, Nokia CEO, stated at Nokia World 2011 that the ‘Lumia is the first REAL Windows Phone’ he was talking about it being the first piece of hardware that really matched the poer and grace of the operating system.

Nokia Lumia 800: 10 things we already love

Elop spoke a great deal about deal and how form must follow function, even to the extent that Nokia looked to one of the greatest Finnish architects ever, Alvar Aalto, for inspiration and elegance. The idea that ‘Lumia form follows function and maintains Nokia’s long line of beautifully designed phones’, can be seen as much as in what Nokia chose to leave out as it packed into the Nokia Lumia 800.

If Stephen Elop spoke about grace and design, it was left to Kevin Shields, senior vice president of Mobile Smart Devices, to talk a little more frankly, especially with his opening gambit that the Nokia Lumia 800 is ‘a beauty on the outside; [while] it’s a beast on the inside’

Shields went on to discuss the fact that the Nokia Lumia 800 comes free with Drive. ‘it’s the only Windows Phone to come with free turn-by-turn navigation. You can download and install maps prior to trip or if you drive off map then it will download what you need to get you where you’re going.’

Looking at other features, the Nokia Lumia 800 packs in Nokia Music and Mix Radio. ‘It’s an effortless way of getting great music that is stored online so you can just tap into it. What’s more, if there is one you like, then you can download and listen to them offline.’ It’s a nice way to get music on your smartphone without having to try to hard, ‘I don’t know how to make music any easier!’ said Shields.

Elop ended his keynote stating that ‘Lumia is light, it’s a new dawn for Nokia’ before going on to mention that things will certainly get more interesting with time. After all, the Nokia Lumia 800 is merely the start of what will be a long trend of Windows Phone devices to come!

One of the most interesting ideas around design that emerged from the keynote came towards the end when it was discussed that the marketing campaign would focus on the enthusiastic 25-year old market. That’s not saying only this age group is being targeted, but the 25-year old in each of us, the person open to new experiences, users who want to experience everything for themselves, to discover ‘The Amazing Every Day’.

What do you think, is the Nokia Lumia 800 the dawn of a new day for Nokia and is this the smartphone you want to discover the amazing every day with? Let us know your thoughts in the Comments below.

Source: http://www.noknok.tv/2011/11/03/nokia-lumia-800-stephen-elop-and-keven-shields-design-thoughts-from-nokia-world-2011/

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Nokia plans US re-entry

Nokia Oyj will reenter the US smartphone market in early 2012 with the introduction of devices running Microsoft Corp’sWindows Phone for multiple US carriers, Chief Executive Officer Stephen Elop said.

“Our intention is to come back in the United States and grow significant share in this market,” Elop said in an interview today at Bloomberg’s headquarters in New York.

Elop, 47, last week unveiled Nokia’s first Windows Phone models after the Espoo, Finland-based company struggled to sell smartphones based on its own 10-year-old software. Nokia has lost more than 60 billion euros ($85 billion) in market value since Apple Inc. introduced the iPhonein 2007. The company intends to widen its range from the 420-euro Lumia 800 and 270- euro Lumia 710 introduced last week with both cheaper and more expensive devices, Elop said.

“Our plans are to be very competitive and to go head-on with the appropriate devices at the appropriate price points,” Elop said. “We know we need to get volume moving and we need from that to develop economies of scale. And then as we do more and more differentiation, we expand gross margin.”

Elop didn’t exclude entering the tablet-computer market, though he said the company hasn’t announced plans to do so. Microsoft’s forthcoming Windows 8, which will have a tiled user interface with dynamic updates similar to Windows Phone, is like a “supercharged” version for tablets, he said.

‘New opportunity’

“There’s a new tablet opportunity coming,” he said. “We see the opportunity. Unquestionably, that will change the dynamics” of the tablet market.

Windows Phone may be Nokia’s last chance to claw back share in the fast expanding smartphone market from Apple and handset makers such as Samsung Electronics Co that use Google Inc’s Android system. Nokia’s homegrown Symbian line has suffered from an outdated, hard-to-use interface and the company was slow to introduce faster processors, bigger device memories and sensitive touch screens.

Nokia has fallen to No. 3 in the smartphone market, behind Samsung and Apple, according to market researcher Strategy Analytics. Nokia is still the largest maker of mobile phones by units, including low-end phones that account for about half its handset revenue.

Elop, a former Microsoft executive, said the Windows Phone line will give users access to more of the popular applications that have eluded Nokia with its older systems.

Necessary apps

“There’s a small number of applications, in the hundreds, that are must haves, and we’ll do whatever is necessary to make sure those are on our platform,” he said. “The popular apps, the high end of the curve, we’ll be very focused on. It’s not a race of total quantity. There’s only so many flashlight apps that you need for a smartphone.”

Some apps will be better than those on competing devices, such as the ESPN sports information app that will be preloaded on the first Lumias and was produced in partnership with Nokia, he said. Nokia will also focus on working with local developers on filling the store with content and programs for each market.

Nokia has tumbled 43 per cent in Helsinki trading since February 11, when Elop announced the partnership with Microsoft and said he would phase out Symbian. Investors had been skeptical Nokia would be able to deliver a competitive phone in time for the holiday season. The shares fell 5.2 per cent to 4.62 euros at the close in Helsinki amid a broader market decline.

Lumia vs iPhone

The Lumia 800 flagship phone has a higher-resolution camera than Samsung’s Galaxy Nexusand a lower price tag than Apple Inc’s iPhone 4S. The device will start selling in Europe this month at the price of 420 euros, excluding taxes and without a phone contract.

Apple last month started selling the iPhone 4S, moving more than 4 million units in the first three days after it was introduced at 629 euros for the cheapest unlocked model in Germany and France. Samsung announced the Galaxy Nexus last month without giving a price.

Apple and Google helped cut Nokia’s smartphone market share to 20.9 per cent in the second quarter from 50.8 per cent when the iPhone came out in 2007, according to Gartner Inc estimates.

To differentiate the Lumia phones, Nokia’s marketing campaign will use the distinctive Windows Phone interface with its big, colorful tiles that contrast with the smaller icons of the Apple and Android interfaces as a main selling point.

Unlike an Apple or Google device, a Windows phone doesn’t present users with rows of icons representing apps. Instead, the home screen consists of a layout of tiles that represent the phone’s key functions and as well as entities that are important to the user, such as apps and friend groups. The tiles update themselves with the latest information, such as incoming e-mail and next appointments.

Second to Android?

The company intends to differentiate itself with content as well as hardware, said Elop, pointing to the inclusion of free turn-by-turn driving directions with maps on the Lumia. The driving application is built on technology Nokia acquired three years ago with its purchase of Navteq Corp, whose camera- equipped cars drive the world building electronic atlases. Future innovations could also entail acquisitions, he said.

Elop has said that marketing spending on the Lumia handset series, including that by phone companies and retailers, will triple compared with prior product launches. Nokia lined up 31 phone companies including Vodafone Group Plc for the initial sales of the Lumia 800 in six European countries in the next few weeks. Elop today declined to name the first US carriers.

The Lumia 800 will also come to Russia and some Asian markets by yearend, while the lower-priced Lumia 710 will start in those markets in the same period, Nokia said on October 26.

The smartphone market may be big enough to help Nokia win over new customers. Smartphone sales by volume will increase 40 per cent next year to 645 million units, Gartner says. Windows Phone may become the No. 2 smartphone operating system in 2015, with a market share of 21 per cent, according to the researcher.

Source: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/tech/news/telecom/Nokia-plans-US-re-entry/articleshow/10577373.cms

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Windows Phone 7 and Nokia Lumia: Win-win situation?

Nokia’s new Windows Phone 7 devices, branded under the Lumia name, were recently announced at Nokia World last week. The Lumia 710, a mid end device comes with a 1.4 Ghz processor and a 3.7 inch screen while the Lumia 800 has a similar processor and screen, along with a much powerful camera at eight megapixels which is capable of better photography and with the notable looks and body structure of the Nokia N9, Nokia’s MeeGo running device. The Nokia-Microsoft partnership was announced on the eleventh of February and it’s taken eight odd months for Nokia to manufacture the Lumia devices. Windows Phone 7 Mango is the newest OS on the block and comes with a growing appstore that’s currently clocked 25,000 apps. Looking at the numbers on the App Store and the duration for which the operating system has been around, the Operating System is indeed a successful one, growing faster than Android did in its initial months. Nokia and Microsoft are clearly on a strict policy, helping each other out as they shape up to beat Android in the coming years.

As the Nokia branding, which was a name to sport (and quite a famous one) couple of years back is being revived, the Nokia Lumia devices will outnumber the sales of every other Windows Phone device in the market, making way for Nokia to enter the Windows Phone 7 successfully.

Nokia is gaining a lot from this partnership, indeed. An all new beginning for the company, after Symbian’s Touchscreen Operating Systems failed to compete against iOS and Android. Windows Phone 7 might be a whole new strategy and ecosystem which might work wonders for Nokia, not to forget that Nokia is also contributing to the Microsoft ecosystem, powering their services and building existing Nokia services on to Windows Phone 7. Nokia Maps, which was recently renamed across all devices from Ovi Maps, is now on Windows Phone 7 bringing Free Voice Guided Navigation and 3D Maps to the Windows Phone 7 platform. Also, Nokia Music was unveiled at Nokia World, which was developed by Nokia with a ton new features over the original Music app on WP7, Nokia has promised to keep these coming, bringing their exclusive small yet interesting applications which we’ve seen from them and their Beta Labs team into this platform, gradually. If this is implemented seriously, Windows Phone 7 could see a whole new set of meaningful and interesting apps from the Nokia team.

The Lumia devices from Nokia are the best Windows Phone 7 Mango devices out there in the market, though they lack a front facing camera while other Windows Phone 7 devices like the HTC Titan and HTC Radar have one on them. Nokia’s build quality has always been known for its excellence and durability and the Lumia 800 has a really elegant feel to it, followed by the Lumia 710. The Samsung devices have a plastic build to them while the LG devices have very poor build shape, so far. While Sony Ericsson’s CEO feels Android is much better than Windows Phone 7 and has terminated WP7 plans for now, how Samsung, LG and other manufacturers will bring out devices in the future on the Windows Phone 7 platform is unknown, but so far, the Lumia devices are the best Windows Phone 7 devices money could buy.

With an all new operating system that’s got an eye-catching User Interface and solid Nokia build on the devices, can the Lumia devices take Nokia and WP7 forward?

Source: http://www.hindustantimes.com/technology/IndustryTrends/Windows-Phone-7-and-Nokia-Lumia-Win-win-situation/SP-Article1-763532.aspx

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Wolverton: New Nokia phones, running Windows Phone 7, are nice but not enough

Nokia’s new Windows smartphones are almost here. But I don’t think they’ll be enough to revive the struggling company.

As you may recall Nokia, the world’s biggest phone maker, announced in February it was abandoning Symbian, after failing to adequately update the smartphone software and after seeing its market share decline. In Symbian’s place, the company said it would embrace Microsoft’s fledgling Windows Phone 7 software.

It was a bet-the-company decision and one that has proven disastrous so far. As sales of Symbian devices dried up, Nokia’s revenue dropped, its bottom line went from black to red and its market share plummeted. As a result, the company has been forced to lay off thousands of workers.

Eight months after announcing the move, Nokia is showing off its first Windows Phone 7 devices, which it hopes will mark the beginning of a turnaround.

The two phones, the Lumia 800 and the Lumia 710, hit store shelves starting next month in certain European and Asian markets. They may also come to the United States, but Nokia representatives won’t confirm that, saying only that the company will begin offering Windows Phone 7 gadgets — not necessarily these — here early next year.

I got to play with the new Lumia devices last week in a 30-minute session at Nokia’s Sunnyvale office. I need to spend more time with them to give a more comprehensive review, but my initial impression was lukewarm. The Lumia 800 in

particular is a nice phone, but I wouldn’t trade an iPhone or a good Android phone for it.

The Lumia 800 is clearly the company’s high-end device, the one that Nokia is likely to position as a competitor to the iPhone and high-end Android smartphones.

The Lumia 800 has a thin, sleek, minimalist case that’s reminiscent of the iPod mini or early versions of the iPod nano. It’s got an 8-megapixel camera and a bright OLED display that’s slightly larger than the screen in the iPhone. It has 16 gigabytes of storage — the same as the low-end iPhone 4S.

Despite having a single-core processor — the iPhone and many new Android devices have dual-core ones — the Lumia didn’t seem to be lacking any umph. I was able to launch applications and switch between them quickly, with no noticeable lag. And its camera shot pictures quickly, much like the new iPhone 4S.

The Lumia 710 is less impressive and is clearly going to be marketed as an entry-level smartphone. With its rounded, white plastic case, it looks a bit like HTC’s myTouch 3G. Although it has the same processor as the Lumia 800, it has a lower-resolution camera, half as much storage and an LCD display that seemed dull by comparison.

One noticeable omission on both phones: Neither includes a front-facing camera, so you can’t use them to make video calls.

But that’s a relatively minor problem. Nokia has long built good, or at least adequate, hardware, and the Lumias are no different in that regard. Nokia biggest problem has not been its phones’ designs or their technical specifications but the operating system they ran on. Compared to Apple’s (AAPL) iOS and Google’s (GOOG) Android, Symbian looked and felt old, slow and way too complex.

Windows Phone 7 is a big improvement in that regard. It’s much easier to use. It looks and feels contemporary. And it’s clearly distinct from iOS and Android.

Instead of apps, Windows Phone 7 is focused on “smart tiles” that convey information at a glance without having to launch a full application, and hubs, where you can access information pulled from a number of distinct sources. The People hub, for example, allows you to see the list of your contacts and their latest posts on Twitter orFacebook.

The problem for Nokia is that while Windows Phone 7 improves on Symbian, it doesn’t measure up well compared with iOS or Android.

Microsoft has struggled to keep up with Apple and Android when it comes to features. The company added copy-and-paste and multitasking to Windows Phone 7 long after such features were standard on the iPhone and Android devices. And despite owning Skype, Microsoft has yet to build a video calling application into Windows Phone 7, something that Apple added to the iPhone last year.

Windows Phone 7 also lags in apps. The number of applications available for such devices is in the tens of thousands; for Android or iOS, your choices number in the hundreds of thousands. While you’re likely to find many of the most popular apps on Windows Phone 7, the more limited selection means that an up-and-coming or obscure app you’ve heard about may not be available.

And Windows Phone 7 has one more problem for Nokia: It’s been a complete dud with consumers. Even while the smartphone market has boomed, sales of devices running Microsoft’s software have plunged. In the second quarter, for example, the portion of smartphones sold worldwide that were running Microsoft software was just 1.6 percent. That was less than one-third of the market share Microsoft held in the same period last year, which was before Windows Phone 7 debuted and the only operating system the company offered was its aging Windows Mobile software.

Unfortunately for Nokia, beyond the company’s brand name and Windows Phone 7, there’s nothing that really sets the Lumia phones apart from other smartphones on the market or that would compel users to buy them.

The new iPhone has the Siri voice-control system. Various Android devices can tout jumbo screens, docks that let them mimic laptops and radios that let them make wireless payments, not to mention a wide range of sizes, shapes and prices.

By contrast, neither of the Lumias has a “killer app.” Sure, they have the latest version of Windows Phone 7, but I don’t think that’s going to be enough.

Source: http://www.mercurynews.com/business/ci_19207338

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Nokia 2690 – Full phone specifications

GENERAL2G NetworkGSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
Announced2009, November
StatusAvailable. Released 2010, March
SIZEDimensions107.5 x 45.5 x 13.8 mm, 58.8 cc
Weight80.7 g
DISPLAYTypeTFT, 256K colors
Size128 x 160 pixels, 1.8 inches
SOUNDAlert typesVibration; MP3 ringtones
SpeakerphoneYes
- 3.5mm audio jack
MEMORYPhonebook2000 entries, Photocall
Call records20 dialed, 20 received, 20 missed calls
Card slotmicroSD, up to 8GB, buy memory
DATAGPRSClass 10 (4+1/3+2 slots), 32 – 48 kbps
EDGEClass 10, 236.8 kbps
3GNo
WLANNo
BluetoothYes v2.0 with A2DP
Infrared portNo
USBYes, microUSB
CAMERAPrimaryVGA, 640×480 pixels
VideoYes, QCIF @ 15fps
SecondaryNo
FEATURESMessagingSMS, MMS, Email
BrowserWAP 2.0/xHTML, HTML
RadioStereo FM radio
GamesYes
ColorsGraphite, White silver, Hot pink, Blue
GPSNo
JavaYes, MIDP 2.1
- MP4/H.263 player
- MP3/eAAC+/WAV/WMA player
- Organizer
- Voice memo
- Flash Lite 3.0
- T9
BATTERYStandard battery, Li-Ion 860 mAh (BL-4C)
Stand-byUp to 336 h
Talk timeUp to 4 h 30 min
MISCSAR US0.78 W/kg (head)     0.81 W/kg (body)
SAR EU0.66 W/kg (head)
Price group
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