’m pretty sure I can tell the difference between something that has 16 million colors and something that doesn’t, but I’ll just forget about that for right now.
The 6555 is a 3G phone, no clue what frequency of course, quadband GSM, it is going to cost 200 Euros have Bluetooth and is expandable with microSD. I wish I could tell you more, but the specification sheet hasn’t been published.

Weight: 97 grams
Dimensions: 99.6mm x 44.3mm x 19.6mm
Internal display is 320 x 240, 2 inches big, 16 million colors
Continue reading ‘Nokia 6555: Cheap yet beautiful 3G clamshell’
Today, the stylish Nokia 6500 Classic gets the green light from the FCC. The phone sure doesn’t look very attractive in these pics. It looks a bit roughed up and a fingerprint magnet on the back. hopefully this indicates that this phone will be out soon.

Via: Intomobile
The history of this model is very interesting and directly related to the way the company changed the concept of product lines, that the company expected from future phones.By the summer of 2005, the company has increased resentment about the direction in which the design was the development of products, which then resulted in resignation as chief designer Frank Nuovo. An if not dramatic, significant changes in the approach to the creation of products, so life had to “thin” machines, their development started in mid-2005.

At this point, the company already otstavavshaya as from Samsung, and from Motorola, the concept of offering such products, began to explore the possibility of establishing such phones.
Via: Mobile-Review.com
Get ready for a life more ordinary: Nokia just loosed three mid-range phones for all your middle management dreams. The 6267 (€240/$322) clamshell features dedicated music keys, a 2 megapixel camera with flash, 3G data, and up to 4GB of storage expansion you’ll have to locate yourself.

he 6121 classic (€260/$349) on the left goes quadband GSM and WCDMA 2100 and “900″ (we presume is a Nokia typo meaning 1900) with HSDPA data and packs in a couple of cameras topping out at 2 megapixels. Bringing up the tail is the budget 3500 classic (€135/$181) candybar which ships with an FM radio, 2 megapixel camera, and about 3 hours of talk time or 12 days of standby. All are expected to ship by Q3 in quiet fulfillment of your prosaic ambitions
via: engadget
I think that it’s much better than Nokia 8600;

Full Article
Nokia’s launched a new high-end handset, and a couple mid-rangers, for its 2007 lineup. The much anticipated and highly praised Nokia 8600 Luna is finally upon us! The beautifully slick and shiny slider takes its place as the high-end designer phone in this year’s Nokia offerings. The steel and glass-clad handset features 2 megapixel shooter and hugely bright display - with the first microUSB port to be implemented by Nokia. Pricing for the Nokia Luna will be around 700 Euros for the stand alone phone - and will start shipping this quarter.

The mid-range front is now bolstered with the introduction of Nokia’s 6500 Classic and 6500 Slide. As the names might suggest, the Classic features a traditional candybar form-factor, while the Slide rocks that cool keypad slider. The Nokia 6500 Classic sports a quad-band (850/900/1800/1900 Mhz) GSM radio with 3G and microUSB in a 9.5mm super-thin package - now that’s thin! The Nokia 6500 Slide also boasts a 3G radio and features a 3.2 megapixel camera in a stainless steel body.
The Classic will be available for about 320 Euros and the Slide is expected at a 370 Euro price-point.
Aside from Luna, today Nokia also announced two interesting mid-range devices - Nokia 6500 classic and Nokia 6500 slide, touting them as easy to use with “ergonomically correct dimensions and surfaces.” Both devices sport QVGA screens, media players, dual-band 3G and quad-band GSM radios, and use the familiar Series 40 interface…
