1/1/2023 0 Comments Nokia 6110 schematic![]() Today it’s difficult to comprehend that this was the smallest Nokia phone to date, making it the “perfect size for your hand and your pocket”. ![]() The advert finishes with the famous Nokia mission statement: ‘connecting people’. For business travellers, there is an optional ‘extended battery’ with a standby time of 450 hours. As children run along a sunny beach to incidental Spanish classical guitar, the narrator tells us the most convenient place to keep your mobile is in its desktop stand and charger. These extras were proudly announced as a calculator and a calendar, three games and ability to connect it to a laptop PC or printer using the inbuilt infrared link (the first phone to integrate such technology).īetraying something of the advertising conventions of the era, the narrator gushes that the phone is “the perfect gentleman”, explaining that it can ring quietly or loudly, or alert you silently. ![]() With its five hours talk-time, one-touch voicemail button and preloaded ‘Snake’ game, it was perfectly pitched at the turn-of-the-millennium market.Īccording to Nokia’s TV advertisement for the 6110, it was a device with “everything you want from a mobile phone, plus a few extras you might not expect”. Yet they were approaching the norm, finding their way into the hands of the business community at which the 6110 handset was originally targeted. Back in December 1997, when Nokia launched its classic 6110 – the 6110 Navigator was a decade later – mobile phones were neither the portable computers that they are today, nor were they ubiquitous. If you ever wanted proof of how fast technology evolves, cast your mind back to the most popular mobile phone of 20 years ago. ![]()
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