If you're one of those people, you'll be able to pick up the new 5310 in either black or white for 39 euros (roughly $42) this month. HMD Global believes, however, that its range of nostalgic 'Originals' can appeal to people in developing markets and anyone who craves a digital detox on the weekend or a secondary device while they're travelling, working outside, or attending a music festival. Still, it's a fun throwback that could draw some additional eyeballs toward its more important Android lineup. The original Nokia 5310 doesn't hold the same cultural cachet as the 3310 or 8110. ![]() It's powered by a modest MT6260A MediaTek chipset, after all, along with 8MB of RAM and a removable 1200mAh battery which HMD claims will give the single SIM version up to 30 days of standby time. It was thinner than previous Nokia models. The handset measures 123.8 × 50.5 × 22.5 mm and features customisable fascias which clip on. The software choice is probably due to the phone's low-end hardware. The Nokia 3210 has a total weight of 151 g. That's right - unlike the Nokia 8110 Reloaded, this nostalgic remake doesn't run KaiOS, the smarter feature phone platform based on FireFox OS. The new 5310 has a 2.4-inch, QVGA display and a physical T9 keyboard, alongside a five-way navigation nub and some other tiny buttons for answering/ending calls and executing commands in the Nokia Series 30+ operating system. It can also double as a traditional MP3 player, provided you don't mind supplementing the 16MB of internal storage with a microSD card (the new version supports up to 32GB cards, which equates to 8,000 tracks.) Like the original, the device has a 3.5mm jack and built-in FM radio. The left-hand rail has a volume rocker while the right-hand edge offers basic play/pause, skip forward and backwards keys. The reborn Nokia 5310 is another candybar design with a red accent that houses some physical playback buttons. So how does the new version stack up? Well, it certainly looks the part. It had three physical playback buttons, for instance, a 3.5mm headphone jack and a slot that supported up to 4GB microSD cards. The original device carried the XpressMusic brand and was, unsurprisingly, focused around audio playback. Following the iconic 3310, "bananaphone" 81 Flip, HMD Global is remaking the 5310, a candybar handset from 2007. At the same time, though, the Finnish manufacturer has found success building feature phones that mimic classic designs from the 1990s and early noughties. Despite this, The Nokia 6650 was never released to the general public in the UK.HMD Global, the sole company building Nokia-branded smartphones, has built a business around inexpensive Android handsets. The Nokia 6650 was used by UK mobile network operators to test their networks during the 3G roll-out. The device has 4096 colours and features Bluetooth, Infrared and a WAP browser. The 6650 uses the Nokia Series 40 platform, and is equipped with a VGA camera and supports Java ME applications. Its appearance is very similar to that of Nokia 6100, but with a larger screen and external antenna (it was the last Nokia candybar phone with an external one). As a result, the Nokia 6651 was one of only two phones that ever launched on the AT&T Wireless 3G network. Alongside the jointly-launched Motorola A845, the pair were the first UMTS 3G phones launched in America, on the short-lived AT&T Wireless UMTS network (the network later shut down, as part of the merger with Cingular Wireless - which eventually debuted its own 3G UMTS network). ![]() ▼ Nokia 6650Ī 1900 MHz version known as the 6651 was released for the North American market soon after. Quick facts: Manufacturer, Compatible networks, First rele.
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