About:High tech of the 90’s from Sony. A very innovative phone with an unique way of speaking. No fold, no slide, but just a stick used as a microphone. Also has the ability to record and play voices.
About:ake the cute-as-a-button Sony CMD-Z5, for example. Released in 2000 at a time when the idea of a phone having a colour screen was the stuff of a madman?s dreams, this sleek and pocket-sized blower looked truly amazing; it was a desirable piece of tech which could fit snugly in the palm of your hand.
Sure, the 96?72 pixel monochrome screen looks crude by modern standards, but at the time it was pin-sharp compared to the competition, and was even capable of hosting some decent games thanks to the inclusion of Sony?s unique ?Jog-Dial? wheel on the side of the phone; we spent many a happy bus trip playing the bundled fishing and clay pigeon shooting games. The Jog-Dial could also be used to navigate the phone?s carousel-style menu system.
Released just before Sony joined forces with communications giant Ericsson to create the Sony Ericsson brand, the CMD-Z5 ? and its successor, the Z7 ? have all the hallmarks of phones designed to fulfil a singular purpose, rather than cater for a wide range of functions.
About:Phone CMD-X1000 by Sony is made in the classic shape. Phone dimensions: width ? 45 millimeters, height ? 150 millimeters, thickness ? 33 millimeters. Weight ? 235 grams.
Capacity of Li-Ion battery is 1350 mA?h, this is approximately 70 hours of standby time and 10 hours of talk time.
WOW Factor: The first Sony Ericsson phone with Windows Mobile 6.5.3
Evaluation in my collection:Great – 9/10
Life timer:N/A |Boxed:YES
Release Year:2010|Release Price:N/A
About:The Sony Ericsson Aspen belongs to the GreenHeart line-up and has a QWERTY keyboard and a resistive touchscreen. It is also the first Sony Ericsson phone with Windows Mobile (6.5.3)
About:The Sony Ericsson Jalou F100i, then, is a tiny clamshell fashion phone aimed squarely at, well, anyone that might invest in a clutch bag and care about their make-up routine. It?s certainly no smartphone but packs in a respectable number of features and, in its non-Dolce & Gabbana branded guise, it?s available for a respectable ?130.
WOW Factor: The first and only product of the M series of handsets from Sony Ericsson
Evaluation in my collection:As new – 9.9/10
Life timer:N/A |Boxed:NO
Release Year:2006|Release Price:130 EUR
About:Sony Ericsson M600 (sold as M600i model in some markets and originally labelled M608c in other markets) is a 3G smartphone based upon the UIQ 3 platform (which is built upon Symbian OS 9.1). It was announced on February 6, 2006 and is the first and only product of the M series of handsets from Sony Ericsson.The M600 is designed as a business tool and its features reflect this role. The M600 supports push email, document editing and PC synchronisation amongst other features. Notably the M600 does not have an integrated camera, which is a positive attribute for those working in environments where cameras are not permitted
About:he Sony Ericsson P1 is a smartphone and the successor of the P990. It was the last of the Sony Ericsson “P” Smartphone series, introduced in 2002 with the Sony Ericsson P800 and it integrates many of the hardware features of its predecessor the P990 in the form factor of the M600. It was announced on 8 May 2007.[1] There is a Chinese version of P1 called P1c. Compare with P1/ P1i, P1c lacks of 3G, thereby using EDGE which is much slower but more available especially in the US and parts of Europe.
The phone uses the UIQ 3.0 software platform, which is based upon Symbian OS 9.1. It is slightly thicker than the M600 as a result of the new hardware features, but this is reportedly largely indiscernible. It is nonetheless considerably thinner than the P990 (25% smaller – as the official press review states).
About:Sony Ericsson has decided to join the club rolling out the Xperia Pureness X5, a model with basic functionality and spectacular transparent screen. It would set you back with about $1,000 and you might well be thinking ?Jeez, it should be able to cook for that amount of cash?, but sadly, this is not the case. What you get for the buck is the feeling of owning an expensive, luxurious accessory and being entitled to certain, premium services.
About:The Sony Ericsson T650i is a mobile phone that was announced in May 2007. The T650i, along with the T250i, were a revival of the T series Sony Ericsson phones. The T series marked the debut of Sony and Ericsson’s partnership with the Sony Ericsson T68i.
The T650i was available in four different colour schemes; “Growing Green”, “Midnight Blue”, “Eclipse Black” and “Precious Gold”. There was also a version of the phone for China Mainland; the Sony Ericsson T650c.
The T650 features a 3.2 megapixel camera (with autofocus & flash) and a secondary VGA camera located on the front which can be used for 3G video conferencing. The phone also features a MP3/AAC music player, a MP4/3GP/3GPP video player, and an FM radio. The phone comes with 16 MB of internal memory and a 256 MB Memory Stick Micro, but can be expanded to 2 GB via the Memory Stick Micro slot. The phone features flash themes which change depending on the time of day. Other features include multitasking, photo/video editing, picture blogging and web gallery uploading, QCIF video recording, stereo Bluetooth, and 3G data transferring capabilities of up to 384 kbit/s.
The retail box of the T650i includes various accessories: a desk stand, a stereo headset, a pouch, a USB cable, a 256MB Memory Stick Micro, and PC software, along with a charge cable and the battery.
WOW Factor: The first Ericsson phone with a colour display
Evaluation in my collection:Great 9.8/10
Life timer:N/A |Boxed:NO
Release Year:2001|Release Price:~500 EUR
About:The Ericsson T68m (often called simply T68) was a candy-bar style mobile phone by Ericsson Mobile Communications. Launched in time for the 2001 Christmas season, the T68 was the first Ericsson mobile phone to have a colour screen, a passive LCD-STN with a resolution of 101?80 and 256 colours. Despite its diminute size (3.94?1.89?0.79 in or 100?48?20 mm, 2.96 oz or 84 g), it was one of the most feature-rich mobile phones at the time, with Bluetooth, IrDA port, GPRS 3+1, tri-band compatibility (900 MHz, 1800 MHz and 1900 MHz), SMS with T9 (predictive text), EMS, WAP, and customizable monophonic ring tones. A simple bitmap image editor was provided, allowing the creation of monochrome pictures by guiding a cursor around the canvas and setting or unsetting individual pixels (several ‘brush’ sizes were selectable to make this easier). These images could be set as the phone’s background image in standby mode, and sent to owners of EMS-compliant phones. With EMS soon to be succeeded by the superior MMS, few owners made much use of this feature. At its release, the phone cost around ? 500, GBP299 in the UK, in either two-tone grey or all-gold.