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No web browser, no GPS, no locator, no camera, no video or audio recording, no text messaging, no touch screen, no color screen, no background image, no Bluetooth, no wWiFi, no email, no FM radio, no AM radio, no voice dialing, no changable faceplates, no data capability, no infrared, no PC sync, no
multimedia messaging service, no flashlight, no text keyboard, no hard drive, no calculator, no calendar, no to-do list, no voice memo, no memory card slot, no USB, no music player, no games, no digital wallet, no PDA, no java, no satellite TV; just a cell phone for making and receiving calls. Includes a built-in phone book and speakerphone, also displays the date and time.
Flint's Lighter
http://www.nostalgi...ies/ourmanflint.htm Our Man Flint [nuclear hobo, Apr 16 2007]
Retro Cell Phone
Retro_20Cell_20Phone [hippo, Apr 16 2007]
More brrrings, less bees?
http://news.indepen.../article2449968.ece Bees don't like cellphones. [imaginality, Apr 17 2007]
Redundant?
Mobile_20phone_20th..._20phone_20calls_2e Mobile phone that makes and recieves phone calls [BJS, Apr 17 2007]
[link]
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Try the Motorola F3. It does calls, speakerphone, texts, date/time, address book and alarm - no gumph, and the battery lasts for about a week and a half between charging. Not bad for 15 quid. |
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<recycled joke> "I'd like a mobile please.
But can I have one without a camera? And
without an MP3 player? And also please
without Bluetooth? How much would that
be?" |
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"Well, most of our handsets come free with
the contract. But with all these extras?
Oy!" </rj> |
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I recently bought a new phone. It came with a paper manual about 140 pages long. After telling me how to arrange my photos, download MP3 tracks, organise contacts...on page 74 the manual detailed the steps necessary for making a phone call. [+] |
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NuclearHob - I'm curious as to your
motives. Is it that you want something
easy to use, or something cheap? |
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I've a Nokia 1100 I used to use, that's pretty basic. It has a flashlight and text capacity, both of which I needed where I used it. And changeable faceplates, which was kind of handy after the first one wore out. |
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As [MB] implies, I bought it because it was cheapest. And this "idea" has been ranted before. |
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[coprocephalous] is pretty close. I'm sick and tired of "progress" masquerading as featurization, 99% of which is useless, incomprehensibly difficult to learn to use *and* which gets in the way of the primary function the device is supposed to perform. |
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I'm happy to pay for quality, but my definition of such does not include a cell phone that includes all the functions of Flint's lighter (and then some). |
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I would dearly love to have my Motorola Star Tac back in my pocket. Rugged simple small and simply one of the greatest phones ever made. |
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I still use my Nokia 3210 - a great phone, and very simple. I think where this idea has a fundamental flaw is in the assumption that we should buy new, simple-interface phones, whereas in fact it's a better idea (and cheaper) to just buy a new battery for your five-year-old phone which already has a simple interface. |
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I'd like a mobile based on the old wind and release dialling mechanism - or the even older, tap-tap-tap, hello? mechanism. |
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They are a bit strange, in that your finger is tensioned at an angle perpendicular to usual - which can take a while to get used to - but with practice, and a freely-wheeling disk, being able to feel the physicality of the interface is actually quite satisfying. |
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Ahh yes, almost what I had in mind - only I'd quite like to keep the old rotary dial as is, and somehow fit a more modern design around that. Perhaps you'd dial your number, and then hold the dial to your ear - or something. |
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This is great, but why do I have to receive calls? I just want to make them. |
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Off topic, but nice to know: I just found a use for the MP3 player and external speakers on my fancy phone. I got an audio book from the library, ripped it, copied to my phone, and now can listen to a P. G. Wodehouse book through my pillow when I have trouble sleeping. Ahh, yess. I drift in and out, and don't start thinking about inventions. |
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Of course I keep the ringer turned off. |
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This is almost redundant (see link). |
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// I'm sick and tired of "progress" masquerading as featurization
Actually, the thing you're sick and tired of is featurization masquerading as "progress". If there were real progress, it wouldn't have to hide. We like progress. We just don't like crap. |
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We've probably all seen the retro headset for cell phones. I wonder if someone makes a retro typewriter to send SMS messages with.
I want to see people's reactions in the subway as granny pulls her little Remington out of the carrying case and starts picking out L ... O .... L. |
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Features over function is what sells phones, I think. What makes a bad design is not the features, but the way that one button can represent many different functions, depending on mode or user memory, and sometimes without a real reason. A typical example is the standard simple digital watch. Telephones are far worse than that, and you are aboslutely right: the designs of some of those are deplorable. |
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I hate to admit it, but picture phones are starting to lead to some actual progress. They are useful for revealing police brutality, documenting car acccidents, rapes, etc. |
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While there are many times when I don't want any kind of camera around me, the effects on society overall may prove to be positive. |
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But I'm still crumudgeony about text messages. Why should cell phones have them when land lines don't? |
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Better yet [Ian] was when BT got Tom Baker to be the voice of those messages. Nothing better than getting a phone call from Doctor Who in need of some assistance. |
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//Actually, the thing you're sick and tired of is featurization masquerading as "progress".// [Jutta], don't put mouth in my words. |
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[BJS] Thanks for pointing out where I saw this before. I knew it sounded familiar. Still a great idea. |
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The day my car was sideswiped and the creep took
off, I ordered a camera phone. |
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