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The Sony Ericsson W580i is a mid range slider style mobile phone in the Walkman series. The phone was announced on 26 March 2007 and was released in early August. It is a 2.5G Quad-band (850/900/1800/1900) GSM phone with EDGE capabilities and has a 2 megapixel camera.
The Sony Ericsson W900i is a 3G mobile phone manufactured by Sony Ericsson. [1] The display of the device is a 240×320 pixel 262,000 color (an 18-bit color depth) 2.1-inch TFT QVGA screen. It has a swivel form factor, which makes the W900 larger than many other phones when folded open.
The T385, also known as LG Cookie Smart is a touchscreen mobile phone, single sim version of LG T375. LG continues to be targeted at the entry-level touchscreen markets keeping the cost of the T385 as low as possible by omitting some of the features found on high-end products, such as GPS and 3G. [1] It is using ARM11 CPU at 208 MHz.
The Sony Ericsson W880i is a mobile phone that was announced on 6 February 2007 [1] and released in spring 2007. Part of Sony Ericsson's Walkman series, the phone has been popular due to its tiny dimensions and low weight.
The touchscreen displays 262,144 colours (18-bit colour depth) with a resolution of 240x320 pixels at 2.6 inches long in diagonal. The W950 runs on the Nexperia PNX4008 ARM9 208 MHz processor [1] from Philips and has 64MB RAM and 128MB Flash ROM. This processor also includes a PowerVR MBX GPU [2] for hardware-accelerated 3D graphics.
The K770i is a candybar style phone that weighs 95 grams (3.35 ounces). [5] It has the 'dual-front' design common to most Sony Ericsson mobile phones since the T610, with the back of the mobile phone designed like a digital camera and intended to be held sideways to take photographs.
The Samsung SGH-U600, introduced in 2007, is a mobile phone manufactured in South Korea by Samsung and is part of the Ultra Edition II series of Samsung phones. It is a sliding phone and the thinnest phone of its time. [2] One of its main features are the call and select buttons, which are touch-sensitive instead of physical buttons.
Other phone manufacturers followed in 2014, such as Samsung with the Galaxy Note 4, [22] and Google [23] and Motorola [24] with the Nexus 6 [25] smartphone. By the mid-2010s, it was a common resolution among flagship phones such as the HTC 10, the Lumia 950, and the Galaxy S6 [26] and S7. [27]