Current slide {CURRENT_SLIDE} of {TOTAL_SLIDES}- Best Selling in Cell Phones & Smartphones
Current slide {CURRENT_SLIDE} of {TOTAL_SLIDES}- Save on Cell Phones & Smartphones
The E75-2 is the North American variant of the Finnish handset maker's E75 horizontal slider with a full QWERTY keyboard as well as the traditional 12 key numeric keypad on the face. It is Nokia Type RM-413 with FCC ID PYARM-413 With North America in mind it receives 3G on 850 MHz (Band V) and 1900 MHz (Band II) using WCDMA. This translate into ATT everywhere and T-Mobile 3G in larger markets where they are using WCDMA/GSM instead of GSM/EDGE as T-Mobile transitions to LTE service. It is a quadband (850/900/1800/1900 MHZ) GSM device making it 2G capable wherever a GSM signal is available. T-Mobile, AT&T, Simple Talk and other are some US providers using GSM/WCDMA. It requires a SIM card so will not work with Verizon, US Cellular or other CDMA networks. This is a very capable handset for talking, texting and keeping up with e-mail. It you are a big user of Internet on your phone this will be less suitable. The small screen and limited internal memory makes browsing a chore. It is great if you need to look something up in a hurry but you will want to cruise eBay on something with a larger screen and larger memory. The high point of this device is the keyboard. Good travel, good feedback and large keys make this very easy to use. The shift key is available on both sides making it possible to avoid the finger ballet necessary when the shift key is only on one side and you want to type a capital "Q" or, worse "Z". This Symbian based device supports themes. This particular device supports automated switching of themes at a preset time. All business at the office and maybe something a little flashier for the after hours times. But appearance is the only real change. It remains a fully functional device no matter what the theme. These were sold directly by Nokia for about $350 when new, maybe more. Unveiled in 2008 it remains very useful. It supports gmail, Hotmail,yahoo mail and probably supports your Internet provider's e-mail as well. as it has a POP and SMTP supporting client. It also supports Exchange and IMAP4 for e-mail. The Bluetooth feature is quite versatile. It supports these profiles :HSP, HFP, DUN, OPP, FTP, PBA, A2DP, AVRC, SAP, HID, BIP, BPP. The HID means you can hook up an external keyboard and type your e-mails and messages off the phone. I use the SU-8W and it fills my needs. PBA (phone book access) is handy when using your hands free device in the car. The camera is lensed with Carl Zeiss optics, marking this as one of Nokia's higher end devices. The camera is acceptable and makes 3 megapixel jpegs. The video resolution is definitely where it is showing its age as the resolution is limited. It takes microSD cards up to 16 gigabytes. So, why get a phone released in 2008? The thing is a tank. The battery lasts two or three days (find an Android, WP8 or iOS device that does that!) and it is all business. Sure, it has a music player and a media Player, a separate headphone (3.5mm) jack to appeal to your entertainment needs but it is not an entertainment device at its heart. It is a dependable, versatile (can charge from USB or 2mm pin charger), well built, good looking phone that will not distract. The only real distraction, and I strongly suggest you download it, would be Snake III, a fun and funky snake game that highlights the excellent build of the five way navigation key. Available in black, red and copper. The red is sublime, the black - classic. I've not seen one in copper, only photos.Read full review
very poor quality, it is not same the picture
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned