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There are five main keys on the phone, along with several more secondary button: A "Begin Call" button (visualized by a green phone) An "End Call" button (visualized by a red phone) An "Address book" button (visualized by a blue open book) A "Call Mom" button (visualized by a blue woman-in-dress icon) A "Call Dad" button (visualized by a blue ...
The Cingular brand was officially wiped off Cingular Wireless was purchased by AT&T, as part of AT&T's acquisition of BellSouth in 2006. 2007 Departures: 'Cingular' dropped as AT&T absorbs company
A notification LED on a smartphone. A Notification LED is a small RGB or monochrome LED light usually present on the front-facing screen bezel (display side) of smartphones and feature phones whose purpose is to blink or pulse to notify the phone user of missed calls, incoming SMS messages, notifications from other apps, low battery warning, etc., and optionally to facilitate locating the ...
Cingular, the predecessor to AT&T, supported legacy D-AMPS/TDMA and analog wireless networks. In March 2006, Cingular announced that these networks would be shut down by February 2008. As of March 31, 2007, Cingular ended TDMA supported for GoPhone (pre-paid) customers. On July 15, 2007, AT&T TDMA on 1900 MHz was retired, while TDMA on 850 MHz ...
A tri-color LED also previously found on the X426 and X427 used for notifications, service status, alarms, etc is found below the antenna. The interior of the phone has the 128x160 TFT LCD display, earpiece, and keypad, with the Cingular logo now adorning the select button, instead of the M-Mode and I icons on the previous models’ select buttons.
The Sony Ericsson Z500a, released in December 2004, [3] was released through Cingular Wireless [3] and Dobson Cellular. [4] The phone has push-to-talk walkie-talkie functionality, but the handset was released before Cingular had rolled out their Push to Talk service.
It is a quad-band GSM phone with GPRS, and EDGE, and a single/dual band UMTS phone with HSDPA. It is a part of the first line of PDAs directly marketed and sold by HTC. On AT&T/Cingular, the TyTN was the successor to the HTC Wizard , known as the Cingular 8125.
David Pierce from The Verge gave the phone a 5.9 out of 10; although praising the phone's picture taking abilities, the "solid" battery life, and "cool ideas like Dynamic Perspective and Firefly", the main drawbacks included the confusing interface, bland design, Firefly's poor accuracy, and the phone's commercialism. He concluded by saying ...