US consumers: “Give us cheap flips”
J.D. Power’s 2006 U.S. Wireless Mobile PhoneRead | Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments
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Filed under: Peripherals, Wireless
Filed under: Handsets, LG, Alltel, 1xRTT, CDMA
We’ve finally reached a stage where we’re comfortable throwing the term “low-end” at a phone with Bluetooth — and as such, we give you LG’s AX355 for Alltel. The modest flip lacks EV-DO
, but offers a speakerphone, 1.3-megapixel camera
, and a black & white external display for $69.99 on a 2-year contract. Joining the AX355 is the AX390, another LG handset that also lacks EV-DO. The 390 drops the camera
but shaves 10 bucks off the out-the-door price, coming in at $59.99 with contract. Both phones support Alltel’s “Touch2Talk” PTT service and are available immediately.
[Via phoneArena and Mobilewhack]
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Filed under: Handsets, Multimedia, Samsung, Sprint-Nextel, T-Mobile, GSM, GPRS, EDGE, EV-DO, CDMA

Quick: what’s the diff between the two flips on the left? Very good, one’s branded T-Mobile and the other wears a Sprint badge. The SPH-M500 for Sprint (pictured left) and SGH-T619 for T-Mob (center) are virtual dead ringers for one another, the only obvious difference being that the T619 sports GSM with EDGE data
, while the M500 is a CDMA piece with EV-DO
. Other notable specs include dual color displays, 1.3-megapixel shooter (“notable” might be a stretch there), and a microSD slot. Moving to moderately more interesting Sprint equipment, we told ya about the A720 a while back — and thanks to our pals at the FCC, we no longer need to go cross-eyed looking at shoddy cameraphone pics of this thing. The squarish clamshell is clearly music-oriented thanks to external controls (touch-sensitive, no less) and A2DP — a viable alternative for folks turned off by the name of LG’s Fusic.
Read – SGH-T619 for T-Mobile and SPH-M500 for Sprint
Read – SPH-A720 for Sprint
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Filed under: Handsets, Samsung, GSM, GPRS, EDGE, UMTS
In the event 6.9, 9.9, and 12.9mm choices aren’t enough for you in Samsung’s fashion- and feature-conscious “Ultra Edition” lineup, fear not: a pair of new 3G choices add some beef that might be more to your liking. First up is the Ultra Edition 11.8 (alias “Z620″), a bright magnesium-clad flip that offers a 2-megapixel camera, 138MB of internal memory
plus microSD expansion, and a QVGA display. If sliders are your cup of tea, the Ultra Edition 13.5 re-ups the cam to 3 megapixels, adds another 12MB of memory for a total of 150MB and retains the 11.8′s expansion slot. Look for both models to drop in December.
[Via Slashphone]
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Filed under: Handsets, Sony Ericsson, GSM, GPRS, EDGE

Hot off the FCC press are these here W712a and Z712a clamshells from Sony Ericsson; astute readers may notice a striking similarity to the W710 and Z710 models announced a couple months back, save for a couple of odd changes. First, and perhaps most depressing, you’ll notice that the 712s feature brutally unattractive black stub antennas, whereas the 710s do not. Secondly, the draft manuals and test reports published for these new pieces list them as dual-band GSM 850 / 1900 (read: North American) handsets. So the obvious question is: what the heck? If your W710i and Z710i are already quad-band and lack the ugly-ass external antennas, why reinvent the wheel? Are we missing something here, folks?
Update: Several folks have pointed out the “HAC” sticker, indicating that these handsets are hearing aid-compliant. What exactly that has to do with the external antennas and the removal of two perfectly good GSM bands, however, remains a mystery.
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Filed under: Handsets, Multimedia, LG, Verizon Wireless, EV-DO, CDMA
The finer visual details of the VX8500′s hinged sibling might remain unclear with these blur-tastic shots, but we think we can see enough here to question whether Verizon and LG are taking the “Chocolate” theme a smidge far. Its glossy exterior is presumably graced with the trademark touch-sensitive, disappearing music controls, but is this not a rather plain looking phone when you pop ‘er open? Gone is the spiffy checkerboard that graced its international cousin, the KG810, leaving a perfectly typical midrange-looking handset in its place. Our hats remain off to Verizon for bringing the Chocolate series stateside, but somehow, something appears to have been lost in the translation.
[Via phoneArena]
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Filed under: Handsets, Sharp, Vodafone, GSM, UMTS
Apparently Sharp likes its 705SH for Softbank Mobile enough to export the thin clamshell, though not before getting a name change. Apart from some minor cosmetic changes, the tri-band SX633 is a dead ringer for its Japanese cousin, ready to bring joy to the hearts of SmartTone-Vodafone customers willing to shed the asking price of $4,180 HKD — a bit north of $500 USD. For the money, you get a 17mm-thick 3G clamshell with 2.2-inch QVGA internal and 72 x 12 external displays, and microSD support for when you fill that 20MB of internal memory to the brim, all in your choice of Black Opal, Pink Champagne, or Silver McIntyre. Doesn’t quite seem to justify the coin; we’ll pass. Er, we would if we were in Hong Kong, that is.
[Via Ministry of Tech]
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Filed under: Handsets, Pantech, Telus Mobility, 1xRTT, CDMA
Say you’re on Telus and you’re looking for a fresh low-end flip. You’d like it to be Korean, but you’re opposed to Samsung and LG. Pretty tough requirements to satisfy, eh? Pantech’s swooping in to your rescue with their PN3200, a basic clamshell with 220 x 176 internal and 96 x 96 external displays, Bluetooth, a VGA cam, 64-tone polyphony, music player, and little ol’ 1xRTT for data. Not a bad freshman effort for Pantech’s entry into the Canadian marketplace, especially at $99.99 CAD on a 2-year contract.
[Via Slashgear]
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Filed under: Handsets, Nokia, Pantech, Verizon Wireless, 1xRTT, CDMA
The Pantech-Nokia deal is finally starting to bear some fruit — the 6315i came first, though we reckon this here 6215i stands as the first Nokia-branded Pantech device that Verizon customers can actually get their paws on. You may recall that in a previous life this basic clamshell was known as the PN-315; Nokia must’ve seen something in it that we haven’t, because there’s not much to get excited about. For your 50 contract dollars, you get a VGA cam with flash and a speakerphone (but not so much of that EV-DO
data Nokia had contracted with Pantech to launch). Not a bad cheap Pantech in its own right, but without those chiseled, Finnish good looks, you’re not really fooling anyone, fellas.
[Via MobileTracker]
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Filed under: Handsets, NEC, NTT DoCoMo, GSM, UMTS, Misc
We have a hard enough time holding it between bathroom breaks as it is without being taunted by sloshing water on our phones, but we have to admit, it’s pretty darn nifty nonetheless. It seems NEC’s N702iS for NTT DoCoMo has a motion sensor that detects tilt, affecting the “liquid” inside the display appropriately. As battery level drops, so does the level of the liquid. Whimsical, yes, but when you’re technologically dominating every other carrier in the world, we think you’re afforded that luxury.
[Via SlashPhone]
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Filed under: Handsets, Samsung, T-Mobile, GSM, GPRS, EDGE
It turns out the 8100 / Pearl won’t be the only device with SureType dropping on T-Mobile in the next few weeks. Samsung’s curious clamshell, the SGH-T719 with BlackBerry integration and that love-it-or-hate-it SureType keypad, is now listed as “Coming Soon” on T-Mob’s site. The 1.3-megapixel cam is nothing to write home about, but it’s got Bluetooth
and support for quad-band GSM plus EDGE — not a bad option for road warriors that are, for whatever reason, morally opposed to smartphones but still like their email fresh and fast.
[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]
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Filed under: Handsets, Others, NTT DoCoMo, GSM, UMTS
Never mind the elderly, this seems like a perfectly hot phone for pretty much anyone looking for a decent 3G clamshell. Fujitsu’s F882iES operates on NTT DoCoMo’s 3G FOMA network, rocks 2.2-inch QVGA internal and 64 x 64 external displays, a 1.3-megapixel shooter, and miniSD expansion in your choice of gold, pink, or black. But here’s the best part: much like KDDI’s A1406PT from Pantech, the F882iES features a piercing alarm that can simultaneously fire off a pre-recorded message to a number of your choice. At 100 ear-annihilating decibels, we think it might even pack enough oomph to outdo our phone-in-a-wine-glass trick.
[Via TechJapan]
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Filed under: Handsets, Samsung, Cingular, GSM, GPRS
Just a month after making a cameo on the FCC’s website, it seems Samsung’s SGH-C417 has started to filter into the hands of Cingular customers — at least in some randomly allocated parts of the country. Not much to get excited about, but the thinnish flip brings a decent spec sheet to the table considering its budget price, namely an external display, Bluetooth, and the customary (albeit nearly useless) VGA shooter. At $49.99 on contract, we can see the C417 finding its way into a comfortable niche on Cingular’s low end, but c’mon guys, we shouldn’t have to pay a red cent for an internal antenna, should we?
[Thanks, Mordy]
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Filed under: Handsets, Motorola, GSM, GPRS, EDGE
Sprint, Verizon, and Cingular customers could well be in full holiday cheer before they get their freezing hands on Motorola’s hotly anticipated MOTOKRZR (alias Canary, alias K1), but for peeps on Hong Kong’s SmarTone-Vodafone network, it seems the seasons’ greetings have come a bit early this year. The best RAZR since… well, the RAZR has gone live on the operator’s website, retailing for HK$3,180 (about $400) on contract — a smidge steep, perhaps, especially considering that they’re pawning it contract-free for an extra HK$100, which by our humble calculations works out to about 13 bucks. Nonetheless, we’re guessing they won’t have trouble finding customers at the going rate.
[Thanks, Brad]
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Filed under: Handsets, Others, Vodafone
Vodafone’s tapped Toshiba to bring its latest music-oriented flip to market, answering the call with the TS808 shown off at IFA this week. The phone can’t exactly be billed as high-end, sporting only a 1.3-megapixel cam and a meager 10MB of internal memory, but a miniSD slot helps restore some semblance of meaning to the external music controls and generously sized external display. Integrated stereo speakers, and of course, Bluetooth
are also along for the ride on the phone, which is expected to launch on Voda-owned Swisscom Mobile this month.
[Via MobileWhack]
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Filed under: Handsets, Samsung, T-Mobile, GSM, GPRS, EDGE
The Trace has been getting the lion’s share of the attention, but it turns out that the svelte candybar isn’t the only new Samsung kid on T-Mobile’s block this week: the T619 flip (separated-at-birth twin of Sprint’s SPH-M500) and T629 slider have quietly started filtering into the hands of users, too. The unassuming, midrange handsets’ spec sheets roughly mirror one another, packing 1.3-megapixel cams and Bluetooth
. Either one can be yours for $150 on contract — after all the rebates have worked their magic, that is.
[Thanks, Rob]
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Filed under: Handsets, Sanyo, Sprint-Nextel, 1xRTT, EV-DO, CDMA
While Sanyo’s phones are known for their tendency to leave customers delighted here in the US, one thing they’re typically not known for is keen industrial design — with the possible exception of the Katana released earlier this year. The Katana’s proven to be a decent low- to midrange piece, but now it looks like the Japanese manufacturer is gearing up to take on the SCH-A990s and Blades of the world with the rather attractive (as best as we can make out from the smallish picture) M1 clamshell. As music phones go, the rumored specs leave almost nothing to be desired, with a QVGA display, 2-megapixel cam, external controls, Bluetooth with A2DP, microSD expansion, and an impressive 1GB of storage on board. We don’t quite know what to make of the circle on the phone’s front, which we’re guessing plays into the external music controls somehow — but if its a scroll wheel, get out of our way, people; we’ve got a Sprint store to get to.
[Via phoneArena]
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SPONSORED BY: BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD Step behind the curtain at Ford Motor. Experience the documentary first-hand.
Filed under: Handsets, Sony Ericsson, Cingular, GSM, GPRS, EDGE

Perhaps trying to drown out the repeated cries of “give us our K790,” Cingular’s launched one for the Sony Ericsson fans: the entry-level W300i Walkman clamshell. To be fair, with a Memory
Stick Micro slot, relatively generous 101 x 80 external display, Bluetooth
, external music controls, and FM radio
with RDS support, “entry-level” may not be doing the phone justice. Be that as it may, the handset’s only going to set you back $20 after all the discounts are said and done (provided you’re ready and willing to sign on the dotted line, of course).
[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]
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Filed under: Handsets, Sanyo, Sprint-Nextel, 1xRTT, CDMA

No this isn’t what a mobile phone would look like in an A-HA! video. (Actually, it is, but that’s not really the point.) Pictured here is the best eye candy Sanyo saw fit to provide the FCC of its upcoming SCP-7000 for Sprint, a phone that SprintUsers suggests will debut on November 5 for $180. Not much else is known, but it should be a ruggedized version of the SCP-2400 (hey, isn’t that Nextel’s job?) with the same parental controls, Ready Link, speakerphone, and customizable faceplates.
[Via phoneArena]
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Filed under: Handsets, Motorola, CDMA
As evidenced by the RAZR and its endless variants, Motorola knows a good thing when it sees one and likes to ride it into the ground — not necessarily a bad thing, especially when you consider that they’re shaping up to make a serious run at the coveted ‘#1 handset manufacturer’ title (don’t worry Nokia, we still love ya, and we don’t expect you to give it up without a fight). The PEBL’s been mostly content to stay in the RAZR’s huge shadow since its release, but its design cues are finally starting to find their way into Motorola’s CDMA stable, as first evidenced by Roc’s unearthing of the W315. Now, we have this little gem that just came across the FCC wires, looking even more PEBL-like than the W315 before it with a full-out etched metal keypad and internal antenna. No word on pricing, availability, or what carrier this might be bound for — those kinds of details aren’t really the FCC’s gig — but if we had to venture a guess, we’d say “less than the K1m,” “soon,” and “Verizon.”
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Filed under: Handsets, Motorola, Alltel, 1xRTT, EV-DO, CDMA
If you’ve got your heart set on a MOTOKRZR K1m but you’re not a Verizon customer, hold your horses — Verizon has strangely failed to secure an exclusivity agreement on this one, and odds are the CDMA carrier of your choice will be picking ‘er up before too long. Next up is Alltel, which is already taking preorders and looks to be shipping the curiously narrow RAZR successor on October 5. True, Alltel kiddies have had to wait a few more days than their Verizon brethren, but in exchange for the delay, they won’t have to deal with Verizon’s much-maligned custom UI.
[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]
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Filed under: Handsets, Sagem, GSM
With their new myC5-3 GSM clamshell, Sagem looks to be trying to tackle a segment of the market traditionally (and strongly) held by the Korean manufacturers: the low-end flip segment. The phone’s spec sheet reads like a younger sibling to the earlier-announced my501C, with a 160 x 128 internal display, monochrome external display, VGA cam, and not much else crammed into its 82 x 43 x 23mm frame. The myC5-3 can be… uh, yourC5-3 starting this month.
[Via PhoneMag]
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Filed under: Handsets, Reviews, Sony Ericsson, GSM, GPRS, EDGE

Sony Ericsson’s Z710i is a bit of an ugly duckling. Maybe “ugly duckling” is the wrong phrase — after all, we found the phone to be just swell-looking in the flesh — perhaps “black sheep” is a better way of putting it. Stuffed squarely between the Walkman line and Symbian-based smartphones, a handful of perfectly respectable handsets like the Z710 virtually blend into the shadows of Sony Ericsson’s product range — but often offer all the functionality of their flashier brethren in a toned down (and sometimes cheaper) package.

Putting ourselves in the mindset (if only for a moment) of a corporate suit on the lookout for a capable midrange phone, the Z710i stacks up impressively on paper for a clamshell in its class: 2-megapixel camera, Memory
Stick Micro expansion, extensive media support with external controls, and dimensions that make it all but disappear in a pocket. In practice, it’s just a solid device, and there’s just not a lot to say about it. Then again, Sony Ericsson would probably have it no other way for its low-key clamshell.

If you can get past the missing Send and End buttons, a paradigm that Sony Ericsson’s been fond of for some time, there’s not much here not to like. Menus were speedy and predictably organized (and animated, but not annoyingly so), camera picture quality was decent, and the inclusion of A2DP is (in our humblest of opinions) huge for a phone in this class. We found the keypad’s blue lighting to be a bit uneven, but the unit we were provided with was an engineering sample, so we’re inclined to Sony Ericsson a mulligan here. Sound quality over the handset was clear and loud but had a strange quality to it, like the phone was sitting in a can; again, we’re guessing (read: hoping) it’s a pre-production quirk.

We found the large monochrome external display to be surprisingly pleasing, to the point where we think we’d take it over most any color one. Why? At the end of the day, a clamshell’s outer screen should be all about presenting key information quickly and efficiently; if you need more, you can always flip ‘er open. With 128 x 128 pixels at its disposal, not only are we getting virtually everything we need on the Z710i without opening it, but we found it far more readable in typical outdoor conditions.

Added to a T-Mobile or Cingular store shelf, the Z710 could run the risk of disappearing in a sea of similarly-priced flips, but it’s saving grace could be its brand name. Samsung and LG typically lead this segment in the domestic GSM market, and Sony Ericsson brings a breath of fresh air with a different (arguably more refined) user interface and a feature list that could make even a power user crack a smile. That being said, we haven’t heard any announcements to make us think this thing’s going to make it onto our networks in an official capacity, but the quad-band GSM radio with EDGE make it a solid choice for our business exec alter-ego looking to try something a little different.
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Filed under: Handsets, Nokia, T-Mobile, GSM, GPRS, EDGE
Ladies and gentlemen, step right up: your Nokia 6133 has now officially dropped on T-Mobile. The mid-range clamshell represents a solid step up from the 6103 below it in T-Mobile
’s lineup, rocking a 1.3-megapixel cam, Bluetooth
, FM radio
, quad-band GSM with EDGE, expansion via miniSD, and myFaves support sitting atop S40 3rd Edition. Factor in the $100 asking price after $100 “instant discount,” and we suspect this thing should have no trouble finding its way into the hands of a few customers coming off contract.
[Via Mobiledia]
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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD Step behind the curtain at Ford Motor. Experience the documentary first-hand.