History of the Cellphone
By: Alex Weick
Nokia 8310
This cellphone was released in 2001. This phone contained premium features not normally found on handsets of the time, such as Infrared, a fully functional calendar and a FM Radio.
Ericsson R380
Was released in 2000 and featured a black and white touch screen
Nokia 3310
This phone was released in 2000.
Nokia History
Nokia dominated the world in the early 2000's with their cell phones, however they have become increasingly rare today.
Nokia 3510(i)
This phone was released in 2002. The first Nokia phone to bring GPRS internet services to the mass market. The 3510i, pictured here, was a more advanced version with a colour screen.
Nokia 6600
This phone was released in 2003. Considered very advanced at the time of its introduction due to its Symbian OS-based Nokia Series 60 platform. Released in the US market as the Nokia 6620.
Motorola Razor V3
This phone was released in 2004. When this was introduced it set the standard for sleek design in the industry.
iPhone
The original iPhone was released in June 2007 with an auto-rotate sensor, a multi-touch sensor that allowed multiple inputs while ignoring minor touches, a touch interface that replaced the traditional QWERTY keyboards, and many other features that helped to give Apple an almost instant healthy market share on its release.
iPhone launch
In January 2007, Apple launched its first iPhone. The company described the phone as combining three products into one handheld device: a mobile phone, an iPod and a wireless communication device.
The Evolution of Cell Phone
Future of the Cellphone
The cell phone has changed and developed so rapidly in the past decade that it seems as though almost anything you can imagine is possible for the future. “Within a few more years, I expect regular cell phones to disappear entirely. We may not even call smartphones ‘smart’ anymore and just drop the term altogether, the way we stopped saying ‘color TV’ and ‘hi-fi stereo’,” “I believe in the future, cell phones will become even more naturally in sync with our biological reflexes and processes such as eye movement, thought processes, kinesthetic, cultural preferences,”
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This is where I got my picture
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This is where I got my picture
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This is where I got my picture
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This is where I got my info
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This is where I got my info