When you have to stand still and use two hands to SMS or when you need either really baggy pants or a bag to carry your phone around, something is just not right. I had to learn that fact over a couple of months. It's successor, the A1000-that I tested for the Christmas issue of the Danish 3 Magazine-is not a smart phone either. If you have to use a pen? It's not a smart phone. Let's go over this again: If it doesn't have a keypad? It's not a smart phone. It's a PDA Phone or a Communicator or something. What I wanted was a smartphone, what I had was not: If you can't use the phone with one hand, it's not a smart phone. Russel was spot on with Smart Phones Are One Handed Devices. Recently, though, my longing for Nokia had grown into despise of my A925. The specification read 3G, 1.3 megapixel camera, 1 hour video records, more RAM, smaller size, and lots of other goodies. And when the 6630 was announced almost six months ago, I knew that was the phone that would take me back to Finnish mobile engineering. November 26, 15:02 Nokia 6630 review: Time to return to the foldĮver since I got my Motorola A925 in the Spring, I've secretly been longing to go back to a Nokia.
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