Nokia 600 | |
Manufacturer: | Nokia |
Colors: | Black, White, Pink, Lime |
Series: | Nokia 3-digit series |
Input: |
|
Screen: | 3.2' |
Dimensions: | H: 111mm W: 53mm D: 13mm |
Weight: | 100g |
Camera: | 5 MP VGA with LED flash Video: 720p@30fps |
Storage: | 2 GB |
Memory Card: | microSD, up to 32 GB |
Os: | Symbian Belle |
Cpu: | 1.0 GHz processor |
Type: | Smartphone |
Form: | Bar |
Battery: | 1200 mAh Li-ion, removable (Nokia BL-4J) Standby: up to 540 h (2G) up to 600 h (3G) Talktime: up to 15 h (2G) up to 6 h 30 min (3G) |
Connectivity: | Sensors: Other:
|
Networks: | GSM (850/900/1800/1900 MHz) HSDPA (850/900/1700/1900/2100 MHz) |
Released: | Unreleased |
The Nokia 600 was an announced but unreleased touchscreen-based smartphone developed by Nokia. It was announced in August 2011 as one of three launch devices for the Symbian Belle operating system. The Nokia 600 was designed as a music-centric phone and would have been equipped with a 106-phon loudspeaker, which Nokia claimed was the loudest it had ever installed in a product.[1]
It would have been available in Black, White, Pink and Lime. However, the phone was cancelled by Nokia in November 2011.[2]
The device would have featured a 3.2" nHD (640x360 px) display and 5 megapixel camera with flash, 720p video recording and 2x digital zoom. It would have offered 2 GB of memory, expandable to 32 GB via microSD card, and a 1GHz processor.
It would also have featured HSPA (3.5G) network connectivity alongside Bluetooth 3.0, GPS, and NFC.[3]
The device was designed primarily for music. The included loudspeaker, according to Nokia, would have made the Nokia 600, as the 'loudest' phone, it had ever produced. The phone was also to have included FM radio functionality with a built-in antenna, meaning that a set of wired headphones would not have been required for the FM radio to function.[4]
The Nokia 600 would have been one of three launch devices for the 'Belle' update of Nokia's Symbian operating system, which would prove to be the final update for the platform before Nokia switched to Microsoft's Windows Phone software.