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Pages in category "Mobile phones with an integrated hardware keyboard" The following 97 pages are in this category, out of 97 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Multi-touch touchscreen, QWERTY keyboard The BlackBerry Q10 is a touchscreen -based QWERTY smartphone developed by BlackBerry , previously known as RIM (Research In Motion). The BlackBerry Q10 is the second of two BlackBerry smartphones unveiled at the BlackBerry 10 event on January 30, 2013.
Nokia E63 [39] offers a more wallet-friendly price tag compared with other unlocked smartphones and does so without sacrificing too many features. [40] It offers a full QWERTY keyboard [41] and full e-mail capabilities. [42] The Symbian smartphone has integrated Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and 3G support. [43]
The Nokia C3-00 is a QWERTY keypad feature phone with the Nokia Series 40 mobile operating system, released under the Cseries line of phones by Nokia. It features a full 4-line keyboard, like the earlier Nokia 6800 series. It was advertised as an entry-level messaging and social networking phone, retailing at 90 EUR before taxes.
Their Xelibri range of phones, which was the company's answer to the fashionable handset trend at the time, became a costly failure. [ 4 ] On 7 June 2005, the Taiwanese company BenQ agreed to acquire the loss-making Siemens Mobile from Siemens, [ 5 ] together with exclusive right to use the Siemens trademark on its mobile phones for 5 years. [ 6 ]
The Samsung GT-B3410 (also known as Delphi, Star QWERTY, Ping Touch, Ch@t (for B3410W) and formerly Corby Plus) is a mobile phone released in October 2009 by Samsung. It has a 2 MP camera, 2.6-inch resistive TFT touchscreen and sliding QWERTY keyboard. [1] The updated version GT-B3410W Ch@t was announced in February 2010 along with the GT-S5620 ...
The smartphone is notable for its backlit 4-rows QWERTY keyboard and touch screen input methods, for its long battery life (Talktime : 7.5 to 14.8 h and Standby : 28 to 31 days), [3] the out-of-the-box access to Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync, Microsoft Communicator Mobile and Microsoft SharePoint [5] and the high pixel density of its VGA ...
By the mid-2000s, the majority of smartphones had a physical QWERTY keyboard. Most used a "keyboard bar" form factor, like the BlackBerry line, Windows Mobile smartphones, Palm Treos, and some of the Nokia Eseries. A few hid their full physical QWERTY keyboard in a sliding form factor, like the Danger Hiptop line.