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The Nokia X1-00 is a discontinued ultra-basic phone manufactured by Nokia for users in developing countries. The phone was announced in March 2011 and released in the second quarter of 2011. According to Nokia, the phone is expected to have a standby time of 61 days. [1] [2] [3]
Nokia A303 [156] is a phone with QWERTY keypad input and a touchscreen. Armed with 1 GHz processor, upgraded Nokia Browser, 2.6-inch touchscreen, and Nokia Store. Apps are readily available for download. The phone is said to break the line between featurephones and smartphones. [154] Nokia A2000 is a China-specific featurephone with a QWERTY ...
The Nokia X family was a range of budget smartphones that was produced and marketed by Microsoft Mobile, originally introduced in February 2014 by Nokia. The smartphones run on the Nokia X platform, a Linux-based operating system which was a fork of Android. Nokia X is also known generally as the Nokia Normandy. It is regarded as Nokia's first ...
Although part of the Nseries, the Nokia N800 and N810 Internet Tablets did not include phone functionality. See the Internet Tablets section. The Nokia N950 was meant to be the Nokia N9 with the old Nokia N9 'Lankku' being N9-01, however the N9-00 model number was used for the all touch 'Lankku' with the original design being the MeeGo ...
Nokia Suite can synchronize contacts, calendar, messages, photos, videos and music between a Nokia device and a PC. Additionally, Nokia Suite can download country maps to Nokia devices, backup or restore the contents of devices, [1] connect the PC to the Internet via mobile device [2] and update the device software.
The Nokia 100 is a discontinued basic 2G feature phone released by Nokia on 25 August 2011. The mobile phone was aimed at emerging markets and budget-conscious consumers, and could be bought carrier-unlocked for a relatively low price (€20 or U.S. $30 at launch).
The book covers the history of the company Nokia from 2006 to 2013, during the upheaval in the mobile device industry caused by newcomers Apple, Google and low-cost competitors. To a lesser extent it also covers Nokia Solutions and Networks, then a joint venture called Nokia Siemens Networks, during the same period. [2]
The Mobira Cityman 150, Nokia's NMT-900 mobile phone from 1989 (left), compared to the Nokia 1100, a GSM phone from 2003. [19] [20] In 1979, Nokia and Salora established a joint venture, "Mobira Oy". [21] Mobira developed mobile phones for the Nordic Mobile Telephone (NMT) network, called the "1G" and was the first fully automatic cellular ...