The
Nokia 9300 smartphone is like a little brother of the Nokia
9500 Communicator. It shares many of the features of the 9500,
but misses out on others.
Physically,
the two devices are similar, with both having the benefit of a full
QWERTY keyboard and a very large internal display (640 x 200 pixels,
65,000 colours). The 9300 is considerably smaller and lighter, but
still a bit of a brick when compared to normal phones.
The
9300 shares the Symbian 7 operating system of the 9500, making it
a powerful smartphone. Messaging is a strong point, with SMS, MMS
and full email support for a wide range of protocols. There is built-in
software to allow email attachments to be viewed and edited - support
is provided for documents, spreadsheets and presentations, and the
software is MS Office compatible. There's a file manager, and a
web browser that supports HTML and XHTML.
The
9300 also has a range of advanced voice features, such as an integrated
handsfree speakerphone, conference calling and a voice recorder.
It's a triband phone that will work in the USA.
Connectivity
is excellent, with Bluetooth and Infrared available for wireless
connectivity, and USB 2.0 also available. A fax port is included,
and high speed data transfer over EDGE enables data to be downloaded
at speeds of up to 236.8 kbit/s. The 9300
comes with 80 Mbytes of internal memory, plus an expandable MMC
memory card. Battery life is acceptable.
The features missing from the 9300 that are included
in the 9500 are: Wi-Fi support, an integrated camera & video
recorder and some of the advanced contact management features. If
you won't miss these features, then the 9300 could be your phone:
it's smaller, lighter and cheaper and you get a lot for your money!
Realiability seems to be pretty good, despite a slightly temperamental
Bluetooth connection. Just bear in mind that it's not a PDA, so
don't expect it to be everything that a PDA is. Oh, and there's
no vibration alert - beware of this if it's a feature that you need
to have.
Features
of the Nokia 9300 include:
Full QWERTY keyboard with 8 application shortcut
keys plus 5-way joystick
Symbian 7.0S OS (series 80 platform)
Two 65,536 colour displays (640 x 200 pixels
on internal screen; 128 x 128 on external screen)
Memory: 80 Mbytes built-in memory plus MMC MultiMediaCard
(can be hot swapped)
Triband
Size: 132 x 51 x 21 mm
Weight: 167g
Talktime: up to 4 hours
Battery standby: 150 - 200 hours
Nokia 9300
Consumer Reviews
Love
your mobile? Hate it? Please share your experiences to help other
people choose the phone that's best for them. Please do not review
this phone if you have not used it. This is a review site, not a
forum, so please don't just ask questions. Please do not use swear
words or offensive language, and please, no advertising!
Average
rating from 95 reviews:
Reviewed by pray from indonesia on
9th Nov 2008
i think is up to you..!! have been 2 years i use this phone.. is
interested, enjoy, and easy to use.. my 9300 is have no problem
at all.. browse the internet, playing music and make a document
is make my day more easier.. ok!! i love this phone,... thank you
Nokia Rating:
Reviewed by Yogendra Kumar from India
on 3rd Sep 2008
4 Year before I Purchage this littel 9300 dude..Its a outstanding
smartphone from Nokia. Continue 4 year rough use, i had not face
even a singleone problem with. And also a single repair not need
to require. More interesting thing that after 4 year regular use
its Battery is still live & healthy. I m great fan of its feature
& third party software support. I install more then 35 softwares
& games This dude handle them very fine. As i m Network Eng. i use
it to trubleshoot network prob.. wirelessly (Asping, Telnet, VPN)
I can troubleshoot my company Router from anytime anywhere just
suppose laying on my bed with this DUDE. Yaa non of one is complete
in this world.. it has no Camera n Vibra but who cares. I have my
Laptop in my Palm.. Note- all 9300 fans just update its firmware
to RAE 6 (6.27) to enhanced its feature. Well its my 4 year practical
experiance with 9300. Not having single one problem, I give it 5
star..... Rating:
Reviewed by Patrick Carbonell from Philippines
on 21st Jul 2008
The phone was basically not designed for multimedia entertainment
fanatics. The goal and very reason for this phone is to equip the
business type person who is always on the go. I find the phone very
good when it sets its standard to those who likes saving a lot of
important files into it. My Nokia 9300 stopped slowing down when
I upgraded the extended memory to 2 gigabytes and stopped storing
files and programs in the phone's built-in memory. At times, it
does slow down but that is understandable for a phone with file
storing features with a processor not that high. I was able to add
several important software as well, but like any other mobile phones,
it does have its own limitations. If you want a practical handphone
that can store some of your important documents, I can recommend
it. But if you are for other features aside from that, better look
for other phones. Rating:
Reviewed by Llucyy from Australia on
25th Apr 2008
Love the phone, lack of "Vibrate" no prob. I have made an mp3 ringtone
that growls like a vibrate, and have added it to the Meeting profile.
Not obtrusive, but I can hear it and pick it up. Rating:
Reviewed by Nishikawa from Mexico on
6th Feb 2008
Great phone for the time it was released but now... it's internet
capabilities and it's overall performance is way behind. others.
And there is still a very limited amount of application available
for the s80 :( Rating:
Reviewed by Muhammed Akif Mughal from
Pakistani but now in (Dubai) on 30th Jan 2008
I love this phone .it's my second wife .I gave four star to this
phone just for two important reasons, 1- Battery life......u dont
need to charge it every night. 2- Antenna..... i can use this phone
somewhere no any other handset works properly. uummmmmmmmah! Rating:
Reviewed by soid ahmad from pakistan
on 24th Jan 2008
Nokia 9300 is simply a very good phone.i ve found it good as comared
to others.i m using it,it is very much satisfactory as far as i
am concerned Rating:
Reviewed by anjj from pakistan on
22nd Sep 2007
its a goog ceel fone for business min aswell for students. Rating:
Reviewed by Akshay from INDIA on
17th Sep 2007
Very Awesum Fone...(1)'bout the camera part...most offices(IT,HR,R&D)
dont allow u 2 carry a camera fone...(2)No Vibrating Alert - wen
u r sittin in a meeting & cant b disturbed,Switching on "Vibrating
Alert" is a real temptation,but wen the fone vibrates,it doesnt
let u concentrate...nethng else?? mail me ur questions - malicious.satan@gmail.com Rating:
Reviewed by rajesh from india on
6th Sep 2007
this phone hv hanging prbo its very very irated to user Rating:
Reviewed by Shishir Desai from UAE on
23rd Jul 2007
I wish that 9300 could have been the best phone in the world apart
from its hanging problems, No vibration & No back light Rating:
Reviewed by sunil from india on
23rd Jun 2007
i raly love my mob. due to its ultimate features Rating:
Reviewed by Yanal from USA on
20th Jun 2007
This phone is the worst phone I have ever had. DONT BUY IT. it's
slow, it hangs all the time, it is missing many basic functionality,
it's bulkey, you have to wait a few seconds when you press any button
sometimes, and it takes forever to boot up. And it's not just a
bad phone that I have, we bought 3 of them and they all the the
same problems. Nokia should not have released such a bad phone. Rating:
Reviewed by yomi olg from nigeria on
24th May 2007
splendid phone!!! top of the chart in business phones. but vibration
feature is essential and which it lacks. Rating:
Reviewed by Hartono from Indonesia on
17th May 2007
I love this phone but I hate there is no VIBRA if any call or sms
get in..:-( if there is VIBRA in Nokia 9300 maybe is many useful
if bring the communicator a long trip in modus silent. Rating:
Reviewed by Sarah from UK on
29th Mar 2007
I love this phone and I've had it for over 2 years. I bought a bluetooth
keyboard and have used it instead of a laptop frequently, including
starting PowerPoint presentations. It impresses my students when
we do time management sessions and I have a few books loaded for
when I'm sitting on the train/bus and don't have anything else to
look at. Rubbish battery and occasionally stops working but the
battery in and out cures it (so far). I'd have another one any day. Rating:
Reviewed by shaji from uae on
17th Mar 2007
goodone Rating:
Reviewed by Xolani from SOUTH AFRICA
on 28th Feb 2007
I enjoyed this phone a lot when I received. However after about
six to eight months, the screen started to freeze. I called my service
provider. They told me it is common with Nokia 9300. However, a
year later bothe screens just went blank (white screen). I was told
that I need to pay for the repair. I only dial numbers without seeing
them on the screen. Despite the great software and phone, I will
not recommend it to any person, reliability is 100% dreadful. What
can I do? My Nokia 6110 never gave me trouble in seven years. Rating:
Reviewed by Daniel from Jamaica on
23rd Feb 2007
vry great features,clear screen and lots of memory.Its the complete
feature dispite no camera and WIFI Rating:
Reviewed by Neil McRae from UK on
5th Feb 2007
A decent business phone: crisp & bright landscape screen is ideal
for spreadsheets. Keyboard better than messing about with smeary
touchscreen/ fiddly stylus/ writing recognition. Ever tried looking
at a screen in sunlight after you've touched it or using touchscreens
in a jiggling urban vehicle? QWERTY also faster than other means
of texting (tho ergonomics not quite as rapid as old batwing 6820
which was incredibly fast). Easy to take notes from someone while
using earpiece. Two crashes, fully recovered straight away, run
it a year so far, trouble free otherwise. Runs 2-3 days mild use/
standby but as back-up I take carcharger if making quite a few calls
in a day. Very crisp speakerphone mode allows several of you to
discuss/ absorb what the caller is on about. I never wanted vibrate
alert: if in an uninterruptible meeting, I just switch phone section
off entirely, else leave it on. I have a proper digital camera,
and have no use for a reduced function camera in a phone: whoever
I'm with can always take a basic instant shot on their phone and
bluetooth it to me. Lack of backlight? fold screen forward more
to about 100 degree angle and plenty light washes over keys. Running
several of the adequately featured applications at once does not
phase the phone - you can check calendar during a call without closing
spreadsheet, say. And 're-maximise' anything else still open via
[Menu] key. If I wanted the functionality of higher end wi-fi or
blackberry models, the extra total cost of ownership would provide
a business case for buying and running a laptop. So for simple business
planning, record-keeping, and keeping in touch on the move, the
phone has performed ideally. Finally, easy music load via PC, plus
fine sound via Nokia stereo headphones is good on holiday or to
de-stress longer work trips if sharing the driving. Rating:
Reviewed by Tony from UK on 31st
Jan 2007
Pile of junk, I've had this model since June 06 and I'm now on my
4th phone. It locks up and I get the white screen of death. When
it locks up it lost all my appointments and notes! O2 have been
less than helpful giving me conflicting solutions and empty promises.
I'm going on the weekend to demand an upgrade to 2 cans and a piece
of string, it cannot be any worse. Rating:
Reviewed by Umar from UK on 3rd
Jan 2007
I think this is a promising smartphone - let's be clear on this,
hopefully this is ONLY the beginning of a better series! And hopefully
TECHNOLOGY in GENERAL will improve too, making the series better
too. lol =D Anyway, I had my phone passed down from my dad who used
it in university to take notes, for one year. I am currently in
college and use this phone to my advantage: ebooks, notes, word-processing,
calculating, dictionary, etc. I have a few games, but this is not
really what this phone is about. I have a bowling game, chess, puzzle
games, a racing game, golf, and a few tycoon and monopoly games.
As far as I know, this isn't very good for music, although it's
alright - you might consider another phone IF you want ENTERTAINMENT.
But it's a good smartphone for business/education...many have asked
me if that's my laptop! What don't I like? The speed of Bluetooth
(which is NOT Nokia's fault!) and the data-transfer - this is due
to the tiny processor which makes the phone SMALL. But otherwise
it is alright, and quite good. It serves all purposes and needs
really. Some people want a camera in the phone...why? It does seem
"trendy", but who cares when you have a tiny laptop in your hands?
huh? It's good as it is, though in some TINY ways it could be better,
end of story. It is probably the best Nokia could do right there
and then.....and hopefully they WILL improve. Don't knock it, support
it! Rating:
Reviewed by Jaimé from Spain on
25th Nov 2006
Got this phone as a gift and replaced my Nokia 9210i. Great phone
for business. Applications have been working well so far. However,
had to get it repaired recently as the phone stopped sending text
messages and they just went straight into the outbox. Apart from
that, its been working fine and is probably the best communicator
smartphone i've had. anyone had the same problems about the texts?? Rating:
Reviewed by Adam Palmer from UK on
5th Nov 2006
Well what can i say, read most reviews and a few thngs stand out
about this phone. The screen is very good, and the full sized qwerty
keyboard is very practical and user friendly. I could never go back
to predictive texting or the multiple key strokes require don other
phones. It isn't a blackberry, but then i prefer web based email
that settign up my corperate account to my phone, but then it doesn't
look like a blackberry (with a very difficult keyboard to use) and
still has the functionality and ease of use of a typical phone.
The hot keys inside are great and the decent screen compliments
web browsing well. I do love the functionality and the user friendliness
once it is set up and the nokia software for transfering sycronising
and generally backing up the phone. However this last function has
seen too much use in the last 6 months and i am currently on my
4th phone (I'm on Vodaphone). Each has displyed the same problems,
the phone freezing or a white death screen, dropped calls, hanging
text messages, and random rebooting. I have checked and seem to
have the lastest software on the phone, but have been told that
it would take 5 working days to have phones sent away to have software
or firm ware upgraded, with no gareentees this would fix the problem.
Overall when it works it is a great phone, and i couldn't fault
it, however 4 phones in 6 months and still the same problems persit,
i shall be lookign for somethign much more reliable, as this is
phone is clearly not! Rating:
Reviewed by Graham from UK on
30th Oct 2006
I am now on my second handset beth have had huge log problems, even
to the point that it runs out of memory and crashes, at least once
a week. E-mail etc is excelent but it is supposed to be a phone
and does not perform that task well Rating:
Reviewed by Mike from United States
on 21st Oct 2006
While this phone has great features, and I really like it, unfortunately,
it doesn't work. I am now on my fourth phone, with Cingular replacing
my phone three times, due to a software conflict with the Blackberry
software. The Cingular technicians don't really know anything about
this phone, so they have been no help. Given that I have had three
phones with the identical problem, I have to conclude that the software
engineering on the phone is faulty. My fourth phone will be my last
Nokia 9300; if this one doesn't work, I'm moving on to a new phone.
Rating:
Reviewed by Norbert from Netherlands
on 14th Oct 2006
Battery empty in 2 to 3 days, tried a new battery and then even
a new phone but te same problem again. Couldn't load it with my
car charger, although te phone said it was loading. When batterypack
has been new instalated the phone has to recover, this can take
quite a while. Really good is the possibility to add your appointments
and synchronize it with outlook. Sometimes it is not possible to
give in the PIN code requested on startup, (and you need to when
the battery was empty!)have to reset the phone, but that is not
a serious problem, you wil not lose any data. Friends sometime are
jalouse for me having this phone, but believe me, you don't have
to.... Rating:
Reviewed by Ramin from Cheshire on
4th Oct 2006
I gave four star to this phone just for two important reasons, 1-
Battery life......u dont need to charge it every night. 2- Antenna.....
i can use this phone somewhere no any other handset works properly. Rating:
Reviewed by Hartawan from Indonesia
on 19th Sep 2006
better looking for another smartphone.... Rating:
Reviewed by mimmy from uk on
2nd Aug 2006
well, i thought i wus buying a fone, but this is a hunk, lunk.....piece
of junk!!!!!!!!!!!! its hidious! it looks stupid and it is stupid!!!!!
DONT BUY THIS HEAP OF JUNK!!! Rating:
Reviewed by james from UK on
30th Jul 2006
Useful features but reliability is dreadful. Hung totally after
three months so went back to T-mobile (then Nokia?). Then interior
screen stays on when phone is off and battery indicator lies, so
it dies without warning. Then finally it just gave up giving anything
except a white screen of death just as I went off on a business
trip. So I've had no hand phone for over two weeks This is the second
Nokia phone I've had that has totally broken down. I will not buy
any Nokia product again. Rating:
Reviewed by Shan from UK on 30th
Jul 2006
An excellent phone with its limitations (not a full PDA). Two advantages:
1) Its a keyboard centric phone - means u can use short cuts - getting
used to this may take a while but it is really worth knowing them.
2) Landscape mode screen. Excellent for reading. Rating:
Reviewed by Clavigo from Austria on
29th Jul 2006
Don't buy this phone! I (try to) use it now for 6 month and it's
getting worse and worser. There is such a bunch of problems that
I'm really done at the end of the day: phone rings only one time,
various error messages when the call log begins to fill up, slow
as a snail, jog dial drives me nuts, crashes at least once a week,
no key lock, no vibra and most ridiculous: it cannot be used as
a fax modem for PCs or notebooks despite its ability to send and
receive faxes. How could I think that this is a daily business workhorse?
Rating:
Reviewed by Just another user from UK
on 25th Jul 2006
I firmly believe that every people have different needs. Why on
earth there are so many mobiles? why not only ONE! Nokia 9300 serious
is for typical business people who wants data with them. That's
the reason there is no camera..I think its pretty decent phone with
its own class. Rating:
Reviewed by Grant from UK on
25th Jul 2006
What a disappointment.Told it was this ,that and all the rest too.Then
I find it does not have predictive text,etc and will not work with
my .Mac email account!Access Comms blame it on my server and then
I notice that others are having similar problems !Very expensive
mistake,very slow and glitchy ,despite being back to Nokia for upgrade.Now
it has stopped displaying caller id for my contacts when they call!I
hate it and it has cost a fortune in downtime as well as set up
fees! Rating:
Reviewed by Anon from UK on 23rd
Jun 2006
The most shocking phone I have ever used, it's so backward in doing
the simple job of making or receiving calls that I'd go so far as
to say it's worse than the first ever phone I owned 9 years ago.
Due to severe software failings in joining the 2 interfaces, it
becomes confused. At least 5 times a day it won't allow me to answer
calls, a lot of the time it simply jams. There's no predictive text,
the cost of my bill have doubled due to the connection issues and
it weighs as much as Ireland! This useless bit of kit looks dreadful
and due to it's size and weight doesn't even fit comfortably into
the suit pocket of the poor, unsuspecting businessman that Nokia
have tried to appeal to. This means you look even more of a nob
either carrying it everywhere or heaven-forbid, you're forced to
carry a bag/briefcase permanently. Dissapointingly it's a company
phone so I need to keep it as it connects to the cradle in my company
car (also ridiculously inconspicuous), but were it not for that
I'd take great pleasure in the sacrificial ceremony and transition
to a new model. I've always only ever own Nokia, rest-assured this
will be the last I plan to own for a while, well done Nokia, you
shot yourselves in the foot on this one, or did you just drop the
'brick' on it. p.s The guys who praised this phone in other reviews
are either Nokia employees or clinically insane! Rating:
Reviewed by Malc from UAE on
21st Jun 2006
A big fone wid vry big problemzz..software problem..vry low sound
bad speaker fone totally rubbish Big Too big... Rating:
Reviewed by mOnKeYmAgIx from England
on 31st May 2006
If your the kind of person that likes to text,send emails,use diarys
and generally write things, then its ideal.with a large memory &
expandable mmc card slot, video & mp-3 playback its superb.Its not
to big,comfortable to use and good battery life.The only real downside,is
its extremely slow opening applications & even slower when you access
your memory card.In these technological days, the slow performance
is rather frustrating hence why 4 out of 5.But you get used to it
& you will stand out from the crowd,which is afterall why your going
to buy it,isnt it? Enjoy.Cheeoooo Rating:
Reviewed by Iain from Bahrain on
17th May 2006
Bizarre that people would rate this as junk without clarifying the
reason. Good points: Size - for the features, it is not a clunky
phone; a little larger than a 6210 of 5 years ago Screen - awesome
- I have never come across a screen that is so clear in the daylight
- all portable devices should have screens like this! Browser -
for a small device, the browser is easy to use, reasonably fast
to load, and supports sites like gmail and yahoo mail very well.
Just make sure you are set up to view them on a PC, not a PDA, otherwise,
you will receive webclips, not full websites Office Apps interface
- although they are really better for viewing than creating complex
docs, the word/xl readers are really useful No camera. Personally,
the camera in the phone concept will remain flawed until you get
cameras that have a decent resolution (say 3 megapix), a flash and
some picture control functions - in other words, until they are
real cameras. Try getting that into a phone, and you will have a
unit the size of a loaf of bread.I don't miss a camera in a business
phone Large memory - with 80 MB on tap, and up to 2GB in an SD card,
you can get most of what you need. Great keyboard (internal and
external) while you can't touch type inside, because the keys are
simply too small, you can, nonetheless, type pretty fast with either
two thumbs, or, if you are feeling very enthusiastic, with 2-3 fingers
if you put the phone down on the desk (though you look like Gulliver
would have loked if the Lilliputians had had computers!) Design
- a combination of the appearance, which is simple, traditional
and discreet, along with the cross-functionality of it which, once
you have struggled with the manual (goodness knows who writes Nokia
manuals, but they are in the wrong job), leads to a piece of kit
that, every time I look at it, I think "I like this phone" Bad points:
No T9 on the outer phone - texting really has to be done on the
inner keyboard; still, at least that removes the temptation to text
while in the car! No vibration. I'm sure there's a good reason for
this, but it is a nuisance. Browser on GPRS sometimes doesn't connect
- but I suspect the service provider may have a hand in this. Battery
life - I suspect my battery may be somewhat to blame, and have just
bought a new one, but I only seem to get about a day out of it;
and if I am using the PDA functions a lot, then even less. The worst
I have had is 11 hours charge to discharge - that can't be right!
No touchscreen - I used to have a Palm, and was a big fan of text
recognition, even though half the letters I wrote were always misinterpreted
(!) Honestly now, although I would like it for navigating around
the screen instead of the (overly sensitive) mouse, I would not
trade in that lovely keyboard for anything. I have been looking
at these for a long time; I used to have a 6820, which I loved for
the ease of messaging, but it had few other features, and was 'just'
a phone. I wanted to be able to replace my old Palm Zire and my
phone at the same time, and this has really done the trick. In an
ideal world, I would have a little something for the weekend - a
tiny phone which would slip into a pocket, because there are few
things dorkier than jeans and a belt holster for your Communicator,
but it is a relatively small price to pay for the ability to have
a unit that covers so many of the bases so well. If you want a phone
that is cool and everyone will think is really sexy, this is probably
not it. If you want a phone for having fun with ... nope, this is
probably still not the phone for you. If you are a committed stylus
and touchscreen user, the absence of a touchscreen will probably
put you off. But if you want a phone that works as an addition to
your mobile office, then you should certainly look at this phone.
I did, and I am really happy that I did so. Rating:
Reviewed by karl from united kingdom
on 13th Apr 2006
Initially I was a little disappointed with this phone. But once
you get used it and put a push email solution it is really an excellent
business phone. Two things get the latest firmware and re-load a
partial backup (otherwise you do not get the new features). Also
when writing a text simply type in a few letters of the name like
'luke', write your text, press send and it will find the name very
quickly even with hundreds of contacts. Before this it was taking
too long. Fantastic phone and will probably last me for a few years Rating:
Reviewed by Mohamed from South Africa
on 15th Mar 2006
This phone is brilliant. I typed this review from this phone and
it's a breeze. Remember that this is a business phone and the Word,
Excel, Powerpoint and Adobe apps are great. I change my phone every
few months, but I think I'll keep this one a little longer. Highly
reccomended. Rating:
Reviewed by LEON from SA on 12th
Mar 2006
NOT EXACTLY WHAT I EXPECTED IT TO BE. TO MUCH SOFTWARE GLICHES.TO
SLOW.NO VIBRATING,SOFTWARE PROBLEMS.WHY DID THE 9300i COME OUT WITH
SO LITTLE CHANGES? Rating:
Reviewed by Saqib from Saudi Arabia
on 12th Mar 2006
I thought I was upgrading when I changed my 9210i for the 9300,
I was mistaken, the 9300 is extreamly slow looking up numbers, which
is a basic feature and is a pain the sound quality on the speaker
phone is bad. Rating:
Reviewed by jord from rugekey on
10th Mar 2006
looks good but very pricey a good buy though exellent memory an
unbelievable camera pixels! Rating:
Reviewed by Malc from U.A.E. on
8th Feb 2006
I have had my Nokia 9300 for about six months. Initially no problem
(for the limited use which I make of its various capabilities).
But its going to have to go! Reason: data entered into Contacts
starts disappearing. In the case of some entries, the loss of data
is intermittent in other cases permanent. There is a separate section
for Telephone Numbers and the lost Contact data sometimes appears
there but not always. My brother in law binned his last year: I
should have listened to his advice. Rating:
Reviewed by Reegan.I.J from India on
12th Jan 2006
This is really a good phone which is more usefull for buisness people.And
this was the one i really love it . It acts as multi-purpose functioning
in all the ways to buisness people. ~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~ Really fantastic
~!~!~!~!~!~!~!~ Rating:
Reviewed by Glen (Big G) from UK on
28th Nov 2005
Well this phone is good but I must say not great, however its far
easier to operate than the first communicator I got my hands on
back 1999. I have used a mobile phone for the ten years now and
this Nokia 9300 is the best from a business point of view and once
you actually read the instructions (which I had to do this for the
first time ever) it pretty easy to use. However there are some things
that really annoy me!!! things like it dose not always recognize
the callers number even though the number is stored in both phone
memory and sim memory, the ring tone is not loud enough so I keep
missing calls when its in my pocket and so that brings me to my
biggest gripe the lack of a “Vibrate” alert system (I
know I can go buy a blue tooth vibrating hands free but I rather
not look like a big bummy wearing one of thoughts things on ear
walking down the high street). I really do like this phone, I can
live with the caller ID thing not always working, but a simple little
Vibrate mode just spoils it rating for me. Rating:
Reviewed by KKT from Ireland on
11th Nov 2005
After 6 months this is "close.. but no cigar". It's a clunky phone..
(No vibrate alert, no predictive text, often fails to recognise
incoming callers from Contacts db). Nice form factor and brilliant
sceen but a weak PDA. Poor web browsing and no categories in the
to-do-list. Poor 3rd party software availability. Why no touch screen?
Good Music player . Overall: depends on what you want but don't
get your hopes up! Rating:
Reviewed by Greg G from USA on
25th Oct 2005
I purchased this phone November 2004. It works great in the EU but
has really poor reception here in the USA. Placed next to my old
3650 it is always 2 bars less. I also had problems with the internal
backlight not working. It appears that a firmware upgrade worked
fine. Annoying things: -You have to remove the back cover to get
at the MMC card. -The SIM is impossible to remove without a sharp
object to push the SIM out far enough to grasp it with your fingers.
-It includes an Utility Application called FileBrowse that doesn't
work. Nobody at Nokia knows what it is for. -The Windows desktop
software conflicts with many windows apps so it makes syncronizing
useless. -No provider in the US is offering it yet. It is probably
because of poor reception @ 1900Mhz. I spent soo much money on it
I can't justify replacing it just yet. The bottom line is not to
buy it for use in the USA. Rating:
Reviewed by Al-Qud from Bangladesh on
12th Oct 2005
Well what to say this is the worst of the nokia package ohoh no
only second best to nokia7710 which was alos a piece of crack, i
mean what to say after just using the mobile for two days i got
so frustrated that i threw it away for my PA Rating:
Reviewed by Dave from Luxemburg on
4th Oct 2005
I own a 9300 since a few days and it's absolutely amazing. Lots
of you are right, there is no need for a camera on a business tool.
How many phones have a camera and are never used? I'm really happy
that I replaced mw P900 with the tiny Communicator. Rating:
Reviewed by Nick from UK on 3rd
Oct 2005
This phone has many great features, however, it does have problems
with reliability as on more than one occassion, it shut down on
me in mid call. Its only saving grace (and the reason for its 3
star rating from me) is that it is so useful to be able to look
up .doc or.xls files at work without having to load up a bulky laptop
Go for a PDA rather than this! Rating:
Reviewed by Paul from South Africa on
30th Sep 2005
This phone was bought to replace a Palm Tungsten E and a Nokia 6310i;
I was tired of carrying two devices. Sadly, the 9300 just doesn't
do it for me. Compared to my Tungsten, the Nokia is slow. Navigating
the desktop is fiddly with the joystick - no stylus. The ToDo list
and calendar are tedious to use, in contrast to the Palm which is
so intuitive. On the plus side, the screen is great and it seems
well made. The messaging (e-mail and text) works nicely. But, I
think it will have to go - it makes me realise just how good the
Palm really is. Rating:
Reviewed by Ben from England on
25th Sep 2005
I brought this phone recently and it's amazing.....the picture quality
is just that QUALITY and the use of mp3 is superb too.......my overall
conclusion BUY IT Rating:
Reviewed by osa from Nigeria on
21st Sep 2005
I had a P900 and replced it with this 9300. I hated the phone the
first day and say with all authority that after using it for 2months
it is the worst phone I have ever owned Rating:
Reviewed by Pieter from South Africa
on 10th Sep 2005
Exellent phone but no camera, what on earth did Nokia think of.
In these day and age a camera in a phone is like wearing socks with
shoes. The gps adapter aswell as the cordless pen are features we
are still waiting for in other phones. Thus Nokia leave the size
joust slap in a 2mg pixel camera and you have a winner Rating:
Reviewed by Dieter from South Africa
on 26th Aug 2005
Some of you guys must be nuts. This is a great phone. When you get
a new phone you read all the reviews on it and ask other users.
With this being a business phone, I would've thought that with the
internet you'll know exactly what you are getting yourself into.
Camera's are for kids that need a toy. If you need a business tool
you use this, and remember that your phone should not replace your
laptop. This ia a great phone with great features that you can use
when you are out of the office. LOVE IT!! Rating:
Reviewed by Osama Sartawi from Abu Dhabi
on 15th Aug 2005
This phone is perfect, excellent resolution, user friendly keyboard/applications.
Performance & memory management is perfect because of Symbian OS.
In brief: the best phone to have. Note that the size is also perfect... Rating:
Reviewed by LOUIS GLANCE from AUSTRALIA
on 12th Aug 2005
BASICALLY A SOLID VERY WELL MADE BUSINESS PHONE. I HAVE EVEN DROPPED
THE PHONE INTO WET SALTY SAND DOWN HERE AT BONDI BEACH SYDNEY &
IT WORKED AGAIN AFTER CLEANING.SO THERE!! DONT NEED A CAMERA. MY
FEELING IS, IF YOU WANT A QUALITY DIGITAL CAMERA THEN GO BUY A DEDICATED
DIGITAL CAMERA. NO GIMMICKS ATTACHED TO THIS PHONE, IT APPEARS.
FOR A TIME THERE I FELT NOKIA WERE ONLY MAKING PHONES FOR THE KIDS.
THIS PRODUCT HAS RESTORED MY FAITH. THE ONLY REGRET, IT IS STILL
ONLY A 62K COLOR PHONE (BOTH SCREENS). HOWEVER, IF YOUR NOT VIEWING
PHOTOS OR GRAPHICS THEN THIS IS NOT A DRAMA. REMEMBERING THIS A
BUSINESS PHONE. A BEAUT EFFORT FROM NOKIA. Rating:
Reviewed by Tim from Sweden on
8th Aug 2005
As said: What's the fuzz about camera?? I wouldn't buy a microwaveoven
with a built in flashlight, they're better of apart. This phone
does not intend to be a toy. As a professional tool though, it makes
my day. Rating:
Reviewed by ozav sheidun from uk on
7th Aug 2005
for a phone this expensive,nokia should have thought of missing
important calls caused by the inavailability of vibrating mode!and
what was on there mind not concidering that this is an age of video
and camera handsets(business plan).i bet soon enough they`d come
up with a model(say9300i)that has this features and explore there
costumers with it.i must say its a good phone otherwise,very easy
to use keypad,the use of its files,email,mmc,acrobat reader!,office
and the media player is of high standard.secrecy could be setup,which
comes handy as a u could do and store a lot of vital info on this
phone.for durability,we`ll have to wait and see. Rating:
Reviewed by Omar Al Najjer from Qatar
on 27th Jul 2005
I just bought the phone three days ago. I liked the look, as it
seems quite business like, yet not bulky and heavy. Withe regard
to the applications. I actually bought the mobile with the intention
of using for picking up emails, while on the move. However the downloadable
time takes forever, this could be caused to the fact of our server
here in Qatar being slow. I also have an issue with the front screen,
the display is very basic. Overall i guess the phone is just somthing
for people to play with.. Rating:
Reviewed by Jonathan from South Africa
on 23rd Jul 2005
Excellent cellphone, Symbian OS little slow but not a problem.Excellent
screen res,good QWERTY for typing,remember the MENU key wherever
u are (especially when in Messaging),very good sound when conversing,
elegant and sleek look (same size as 6310i)(luffly-not a BRICK).Good
Special Key Combo on keyboard to activate IR+BlueToofle+Synch and
ZoomIn-ZoomOut+brightness adjustment.This is good: you have to input
an unlock code to even read an sms, or access internal keyboard
etc-stops those who don't care for your privacy. Well done Nokia. Rating:
Reviewed by Walid from Saudi Arabia
on 17th Jul 2005
I've had the phone for more than 5 months. I love it so much and
can't imagine living without it. I have my appointments, contact,
to do lists, passwords manager, the Pocket Oxford dictionary and
a few important documents and images stored on it, and I can surf
the web from anywhere. Very stable (I had to reboot twice in 5 months).
I used to be a Palm user, and I miss the large collection of palm
software, but so far I've all what I want in shareware for my 9300.
I love the keyboard, the screen, the stability and overall feel.
I wish the battery had a longer life, better desktop software (something
like what Palm is offering) and a camera would be nice (but not
a must). Highly recommended. Rating:
Reviewed by jon from uk on 13th
Jul 2005
great phone Rating:
Reviewed by raj from india on
12th Jul 2005
well i have seen all the reviews, the only outcome after reading
all, it really feels like nokia should look in to the matter and
make the model which is good for today's needs.nokia has given people
what other phones could not do in so many years (a userfriendly
menu) communicator has a image of style and status and nokia should
maintain that. 1.good camera + vib 2.wifi 3clarity + speed Rating:
Reviewed by MIKE from South Africa on
11th Jul 2005
Disapointing that there is no 802.11a/b/g/i (WiFi), No Vibration,
sometime its quite slow to upload appliations. Bluetooth looses
connectivity now and then. Mouse is to sensitive. Picture quality
is good. Rating:
Reviewed by Margaret Ashwell from UK
on 3rd Jul 2005
I have wasted days and days on my new Nokia 9300 which I bought
to replace the 9210- and before that the 9000- since I need to collect
emails on the move. Technical staff at O2 eventually concluded there
was an incompatibility problem between the new Nokia 9300 software
and the NDO server. Can you believe that the new 9300 cannot do
what even the 'really old brick' could do in 1997? Has anyone else
had this problem? Is there any other phone which collects emails
from NDO and has all the other features of 9300? How can I persuade
Nokia to get me phone which is as good as the one i got rid of 8
years ago? Who is the best person in Nokia to write to? Do yo know
the name of the Chief Exec? Rating:
Reviewed by Deano from Australia on
30th May 2005
For all you sooks out there who keep whinging about the 9300 not
having vibrating alert why don't you think outside the square and
buy a vibrating bluetooth headset like the Jabra BT250 or BT800
(which I have)and as for the camera, really, if you want a decent
shot USE A CAMERA, not a phone posing to be a camera...The images
are junk, most phone camera's don't have a flash and anyway the
MMC Card slot is hot swappable so what more could you want...By
the way the 9300 is a kick ass phone as well...Well done Nokia Rating:
Reviewed by Jake from Finland on
28th May 2005
Outstanding! Rating:
Reviewed by Bill L from USA on
26th May 2005
No vibrate! Too many missed calls inside bars, restaurants, in your
car when the radio is on, etc. I wanted this phone badly, until
I found out it had no vibrate. Big mistake by Nokia. The two most
important necessary features in a phone are vibrate and speakerphone.
No vibrate is a deal-breaker. Rating:
Reviewed by Rik from Belgium on
24th May 2005
I use the 9300 for almost 2 months. The first week I missed my previous
Palm Tungsten T3 so much. But now, I don't want to go back anymore.
This device when used for what it is made...... only one word "outstanding". Rating:
Reviewed by alok from UK on 16th
May 2005
its a beauty...i luved it..having just one problem so far while
using..m not able to connect to my laptop via infrared as whenever
i try to do so device re-boots...Can nebody help plz?? Rating:
Reviewed by cowk from Hungary on
15th May 2005
Guys, this phone is the worst Nokia phone I ever seen.. It's lose
the inner buttons (ctrl) while it's in my pocket, can't show the
caller's photo while receiving calls (with default software), vibrancy
engine is NOT included.... It's hardly NOT recommenned phone! Rating:
Reviewed by Gary Hawkins from England
on 9th May 2005
For what it is, this is a great device. People should stop comparing
a communicator/smartphone to a standard mobile, of course it's going
to be larger, a mobile phone doesn't give you full attachment email
service with spreadsheets, presentations and a full qwerty keypad.
As for a comparison against PDA devices, anyone who has ever tried
to write an email on a touch screen on a train will be hugely appreciative
of a decent keypad. The software range is great, just about everything
you could want to do with it is available. I've set up a HTML editor
and FTP service and now I can amend my client's websites from the
pub without carrying anything bigger than a 6310i! The build quality
is great, it feels sturdy and reliable, not tacky or fragile like
so many other devices. The screen clarity is great even in well
lit areas. Perhaps my only gripe is that operations can sometimes
be a little slow, not so much though that it's a problem, I'm just
impatient. As for not including a camera, others have made valid
points here, including a camera would exclude this device from a
lot of jobs and locations and how many of you honestly need a camera
everywhere you go? and if you do, even a 2megapixel standard probably
isn't going to be good enough for what you need. If you want a camera
phone, you probably don't want a business phone. If you need a quality
camera for your business, a good bluetooth camera or hot-swap memory
card will provide a much better result than any camera that could
realistically have been incorporated without reverting back to something
the size of a brick. As for Wi-Fi, again there's the size issue
to consider and would it actually be that much of a benefit? the
GPRS connection is pretty damn good and the coverage of GPRS is
so much wider thta Wi-Fi that it's hardly worth considering at the
moment. All in all, this is a great device which fits so many business
purposes. If you're not after a business tool, what are you doing
looking at this dumbass! Rating:
Reviewed by Amit Bansal from India on
6th May 2005
It is a very refined phone amongst the communicator series of Nokia
and definitely stands out. I am wndering about one thing only as
in how to activate E mail accounts on my handset and unfortunately
Nokia support centre are not being able to provide any guidelines
on activating my hotmail or G mail account. Can anyone help????? Rating:
Reviewed by muhd isa umar from nigeria
on 2nd May 2005
very good and productive, I love it. pleace try to make a smaller
one of its exert type. Rating:
Reviewed by umair from england on
21st Apr 2005
too big, ugly, and too overall rubish!!! Rating:
Reviewed by Hassan from Egypt on
18th Apr 2005
Having used the Nokia 9300 for over 2 months now, it is a very average
phone. I found a few bugs, nothing fatal though. Size is suitable
(ok for pocket carry) and the menus are easy to get used to. Issues
I have with this phone are - Bluetooth connectivity is bad, it keeps
disconnecting, and only supports headset mode, not handsfree - Sound
quality is very average - Flip opened mode needs both hands - Some
bugs here and there - Battery lasts me a day (I am a heavy user)
On the upside - Superb speakerphone sound quality with open flip
(person on other side does not realise you're on a speaker) - Good
contacts search - Internet GPRS is OK Hope this is useful Rating:
Reviewed by Jaz from UK on 16th
Apr 2005
Okay, moved from my I-Mate Jam to the Nokia 9300 a few days ago
after seeing one for the first time (couldnt help myself! ). Thought
I would post my intial thoughts about it compared to my Windows
Mobile experience. Interesting fact: Nokia dont class the 9300 as
one of their Communicator range, prefering instead to call it a
"smartphone", despite the internal specifications (memory, processor
and even firmware) being identical to the 9500. Apparently it has
something to do with it being aimed at the lifestyle user, rather
than the business customer. Whatever! Its a Communicator Nokia,
nothing you can say will change that! Getting one of these babies
in your hands is like the first time you got a Jam in your hand;
its like the first time you saw the physical difference in size
between an XDAII and a Jam, you cant help but say "Wow!". A friend
of mine has a 9500, and its bloody huge, I wouldnt even think about
owning one, as it really IS a brick. The 9300, however, is more
akin in terms of size to a Nokia 6310i, something many business
people out there will already be used to carrying around. Not only
is it reduced in length and width compared to a 9500, it weighs
a whole hell of a lot less too! Despite this size reduction, Nokia
has managed to include a 65000 colour TFT screen with the same resolution
as the 9500 (if physically slightly smaller) and excellent contrast.
I sometimes noted that it was difficult to see the screen of my
Jam in direct sunlight, as it is difficult with most mobiles. Not
so with the 9300, however, the screen is bright a clear in all lighting
conditions. The keyboard is full qwerty, and I found the size of
the device perfect for "two thumb" typing whilst holding the device
in your hands. I do have one or two gripes about the keyboard; the
comma and full stop keys are on the left side of the keyboard, not
the right, just to confuse everyone, but I have gotten used to this
very quickly. Also, the tactile feedback could be better, but to
counter this, the device gives you an audible "click" when a keypress
is made, so these are only minor problems. The device has an 80MB
internal memory, which is massive for a Symbian device as the OS
has far less resource requirements in comparison to Windows Mobile.
Since I started using the 9300, I have yet to see a low memory error,
and that is with ALL main applications open and running in the background
as well as a few documents!! Beat that MS!! Despite the ample internal
memory, Nokia includes a 128MB MMC card inside the box free, so
memory is not an immediate concern for all but the most serious
gadget freak! I was rather suprised that Nokia included a normal
MMC card with the 9300 rather than the RS-MMC rubbish they have
been forcing on customers who use the rest of their new smartphone
range, but upon reflection, I would think it would have caused too
many complaints from upgrading Communicator customers if they would
have been required to shell out for all new memory, rather than
use what was in their previous 9x00. If I have one gripe about the
9300's performance, it would have to be the processor Nokia chose
to build in to the device. They chose to ship the 9300 and its fatter
brother, the 9500, with 150Mhz processors which can sometimes chug
a bit under heavy stress. I found that leaving programs constantly
in use (like messaging) open in the background and multi-tasking
alleviates this somewhat, as it is always quicker to switch to an
open application than to start from scratch every time. Thankfully,
in this, the 9300's 80MB internal memory helps a LOT!! As for the
obvious ommisions from the 9300 in comparison to the 9500, this
being the camera and WiFi, for myself their non-inclusion doesnt
bother me much. WiFi would have been useful, but as I come from
an I-Mate Jam (which didnt have it either) I cant say its something
I am missing. I thought I would miss the camera a lot more than
I do until I remembered the last time I used my Jam's camera: I
remember trying to use it in a pub to take a comedic picture of
my best friend Aidan, and then realised that the camera was so poor,
you couldnt make out ANYTHING in the shot anyway. I never really
used the camera on my Jam since I realised that it was bad, so I
am not missing it not being on the 9300 either. Besides, I realised
a work around yesterday whilst also in the pub! I just took a picture
with my mate's P900, and then bluetoothed it to my 9300 in seconds.
The bluetooth implementation on the 9300, by the way, is flawless.
Its a lot more stable than my Jam and seems to transfer quicker
as well. Overall, my impression of the 9300 is highly favourable.
I wanted to update from my Jam to a device with a keyboard, as the
on-screen T9 thing was getting old real fast, and I dont think I
could have chosen a better replacement. Okay, its Symbian, so there
are a lot of MS fan-boys on here who arent going to hear a word
I have said above, and will be instantly dissmissive of this mini-review,
but I have to say that in summation, the Nokia 9300 is a far better
phone than my I-Mate Jam, and has more than enough PDA features
to satisfy me. I am glad I switched, the only thing I will miss
about my Jam is the community on here with you guys, but I will
still be about, just for the craic! Conclusion then: The Nokia 9300
has a thumbs up from me, and I recommend it highly. Rating:
Reviewed by Sony from India on
8th Apr 2005
I got this as a gift, I've been reviewing all smartphones available
for sometime. And I've come to the conclusion (after using it) that
Nokia 9300 beats all - if you're looking for a pure business phone.
At the end of the day, pulling out a stylus just to type is kinda
cumbersome. A real smart phone shud let you type with your God given
fingers! Wifi would have been something I'd like on this... but
so far no probs. This is much smaller than other 9XXX - and they
havent compromised on keyboard or screen size. Rating:
Reviewed by Howard Long from UK on
6th Apr 2005
I've had the Nokia 9000, 9110, Sony Ericsson P800 and P910 as phone/pda
over the years. So far, the 9300 is as good as it gets. On the plus
side, compared to earlier Nokia Communicators size is really much
smaller - it's about the same size as normal phones from five years
ago. The keyboard is really easy to use, although it's a two-thumb
workout. Having a fax facility back again (as in the original Communicators)
is great. Battery lasts ages. Screen is really clear. I've always
been a champion of the clamshell design. Now for the best bits...
both the supplied USB cable and the Bluetooth work great with my
laptop PC, and it was really easy to set up. On the downside...
The mouse movement which is a bit hit and miss. No vibrate. Browser
takes some getting used to. Features on other smart phones I don't
miss: a camera, touch screen. Nice to have - WiFi. Acid test...
unlike so many others, this phone has not crashed yet! In conclusion,
being smaller has surprisingly not been a compromise - the keyboard
and screen are really excellent. Rating:
Reviewed by Tim from North Wales on
1st Apr 2005
I bought this phone 2 weeks ago, and despite being initially disappointed
this phone has grown on me immensely. One word of warning to potential
purchasers, though; I naievely assumed that a standard Nokia camera
attachment would work with this phone - no such luck. I've now resigned
myself to using my digital camera and transferring photos to the
phone using the memory card. That said, the build quality, features,
overall useability and general feel of this phone is truly excellent.
The only thing this phone truly needs is a headphone socket to make
proper use of the MP3 player - what a tragic waste. Overall: An
excellent phone tragically let down by some very glaring (and cheap)
omissions. Rating:
Reviewed by Chris from UK on
27th Mar 2005
Not all jobs these days allow you to carry a camera-equipped phone
into "sensitive" areas (R and D, HR, IT, etc). Remember that this
is primarily a business phone and as such it does the business niceley
(I really miss my old Psion!). Rating:
Reviewed by Faheem from Pakistan on
18th Mar 2005
I have tried all models of Nokia 9 series. I have found this Nokia
9300 very handy and state of the art that I have ever used. No doubt
camera and Wi-Fi is missing but it is really worth to try. Impressive
and elegant phone. Thanks to Nokia. Rating:
Reviewed by Ramz from Pakistan on
17th Mar 2005
a cool communicator i have ever seen ! wao nokia you done and fullfill
the dreams of pda and cell users keep it up ! Rating:
Reviewed by Vivek Sahdev from India
on 25th Feb 2005
I purchased this phone 3 days back. The performance and resloution
is outstanding. The memory pack is excellent , got fax feature.
EGPRS and EDGE is giving additional benefits to it. This is the
reason i sold my SONY ERICSSON P910I and bought Nokia 9300. Its
hot swapable memory card is really impressive. Wi-Fi wise i did
not find any big loss and so for camera too. Excellent state of
art and got changeable covers. Rating:
Reviewed by Richard from Germany on
22nd Feb 2005
it's handy, fun to work with offers all functions I need, and even
looks better now. the best things are the organiser, which is clearly
arranged, the big and crystallclear screen and the loudspeaker.
i use many other funtions and it really helps me organising my days
more efficient. carrying it around can be disturbing sometimes as
it is bigger than other phones. still it s my favourite phone. well
done. Rating:
Reviewed by biff from usa on
20th Feb 2005
Bought phone from Simoncells and have TMobile service. Must say
I am impressed. The reviews on average stated the phone was too
big. Have not had that problem at all. If anything the keyboard
is too big for thumb typing. I no longer need to carry a laptop
given that I can store large files on email and download as needed.
It does excel, documents, and presentations. The web surfing is
slow, about like dial-up. Email is much better than blackberry.
I added a 1gig MMS card so memory is not an issue. Overall I'm glad
I made the purchase. Would have been a bargain at double the cost.
Only negatives are short battery life and somewhat difficult "mouse/joystick". Rating:
Reviewed by Polanzki from Indonesia
on 9th Feb 2005
Too bad it doesn't any camera....the menus are Nokia standard..not
much of a progress....I'd rather using my old 6600 whi;le traveling
and leave my 9300 at the office... If u have a few bucks more, get
the Nokia 9500... Rating:
Reviewed by pi from Malaysia on
29th Jan 2005
It's been 2 days. The 9300 has some hits and misses. The best being
the size is just right for a Smartphone, one that doesn't overly
burden its user. I decided against the 9500 because of its size.
But I miss the Wifi in it thats not on the 9300. I actually expected
more from Nokia from a User Interface standpoint. I held an acid
test of how much I can get out of the phone without peeking in the
manual, and found much of what I needed not too intuitive enough.
Nokia needs to wrest away control from them 'I-can-do-cool-designs'
engineers there. Rating:
Reviewed by Tha Doggfather from Tha
real NY Ghetto on 25th Jan 2005
???????????? all i can say ??????????????- why make it, such a bad
fone. Get tha Sanyo GX-40 Rating:
Reviewed by Akshay from India on
18th Jan 2005
Phenomenal.. I've had a chance to check out a test piece of this
and surprisingly for a test piece it didn't throw up any bugs..
But I dont really see te need to "economise" on such n expensive
phone by excluding a camera.. Rather pointless, dont you think ? Rating:
Reviewed by Ronn Lovage Christian from
Indonesia on 10th Jan 2005
SIMPLY JUNK! Rating:
Reviewed by jose from chelsea on
7th Jan 2005
this is a beautiful phone. the screen is crystal clear. Rating: