|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Comments on ‘15 years ago: the first mass-produced GSM phone’Friday 9th November 2007 08:02 GMT I remember my first phone...Graham Jordan • Friday 9th November 2007 09:01 GMT
Was a horibble Motorola with one line display, huge antenna, crap battery life, heated your face up to kingdom come after just a minute and only worked in my bedroom. Shit i even remember the number, 0441 196475!!! From then on I've been a nokia man through out, god bless the simplicity of the things, easy to use, smart and erm... easy to use. My first phone was the NEC P3Peter • Friday 9th November 2007 09:16 GMT
Boy, does this throw up memories. I remember buying my first mobile phone, I think it was in 1990-1991. At the time, the Motorola 'brick' was the only thing going, and you could see people deliberately make calls in Central London to impress others. I didn't see the point of carrying a brick in a city where there were at the time relatively many working phone booths, but the P3 sold me to portable telephone :-). The NEC P3 was nicer, had a better sound quality and later it emerged it was rather easy to 'upgrade' with a diagnostics chip. But the real kicker was it's size - I didn't really want to wander around showing off, and that was almost unavoidable with the Motorola because you needed a rucksack to carry it.. Ah, a phone that is just a phoneHedley Phillips • Friday 9th November 2007 09:29 GMT
Gone are the days when a phone was just that. A phone. I don't need a camera, bluetooth, games, ringtones, etc etc. I want to be able to phone someone, talk and then hang up. Myabe the odd text message every now and again. But where is the profit in that? How are they going to sell us new 'stuff' if there aren't new tricks and gadgets for us to buy. AH yes, the day my life changedKenny Millar • Friday 9th November 2007 09:35 GMT
I used to enjoy the 3.5 hour drive between our HQ in Glasgow, and branch office in Manchester, until the boss gave me a 1011 - then I was getting pestered every few minutes on the drive and I'd usually end up with a sore head all day! Now I do have a mobile, but I don't give the number to anyone except my wife and daughter - well, I'm paying the bill therefore the phone is for my convenience, not the convenience of some random person who wants to call me! Still got one of thoseThe Other Steve • Friday 9th November 2007 11:00 GMT
The 'Orange' branded one circa about 1993 I think, which is slimmer and sleeker, unless you put the long life battery on it. Still in good working order, and the only reason I don't still use it is that when you send an SMS you have to input the number manually. Other than that it's a damn good phone. It looks like a phone, it rings like a phone, you make and receive calls on it. That is all. These days the styling passes for retro geek chic. If only it could keep up in the SMS stakes, it would be housing my current SIM. On the orange network, it got CLI (and passthrough from BT at that) well before BT introduced it. Great way to spook people out before they all realised what CLI was. Ah, those were the days Need an icon for 'misty eyed nostalgia' :-) And - 15 years laterTom Oliva • Friday 9th November 2007 11:02 GMT
The network operators are still not implementing the IMEI fully so there's likely hundreds of thousands of nicked phones still in use on UK networks alone - a phone is still a target for some scrote to stab you in the street rather than a collection of plastic bits n bobs. way to go guys! Non-standard SMS???Andrew Moore • Friday 9th November 2007 11:37 GMT
well quelle surprise. Nokia not conforming to a standard??? Like their non-standard infrared and non-standard bluetooth.... My phone historyDamian Webber • Friday 9th November 2007 11:57 GMT
I was a motorbike courier when this phone came out, previously I had what I believe was the first hands free kit in the country. A nokia car phone, black box in the panier, phone mounted on the tank and home wired into a helmet intercom. Then came the Motorolla portable, you know the one with a battery the size of car one attached underneath and weighed about 20kg Then came the brick which once fell off the bike at 70mph on the M6 and still worked when I retrieved it unlike todays phone which breaks when you look at it funny (or in the case of my current WM5 device breaks when you turn it on!) Then this Nokia, which really was the turning point in portable phones, not only do I remember the number I still have it @Hedley PhillipsStu • Friday 9th November 2007 12:11 GMT
One product for you - Motorola F3. BTW My first phone was the ye olde chunky Nokia, cant remember the model number but it looks loads like the 5190 I just googled, with the firm rubber keys. Somewhere around the late 90s. Fantastic! Nokia 1st??bertie bassett • Friday 9th November 2007 13:13 GMT
in the UK with GSM?? At the time I was working in the biz, and I think I recollect that a Motorola 3200 pre-dated the Nokia..certainly the 1st GSM phone we had/touched/played with was a 3200 which would have been in '93. Still swapping sims was a pleasure compared to manually reprogramming phone numbers (and ESN's - the forerunner to IMEI's) into phones.... GSM in 1992?Daniel B. • Friday 9th November 2007 13:44 GMT
Ow. I know tech takes some time to get here, but 1992? That's like 10+ years of lagging behind! TDMA came sometime around 1999, here known as "Digital" because that was the first digital network we got. GSM must've come some time around 2002, I bought my first GSM phone in 2003, a Nokia 1100. As for my first phone, well that would be an Ericcson ... hm... can't remember the model, but its the one Arnie uses in "Eraser". Small phone for those days (and maybe these days) standards, but it had a big-ass battery that made the phone fat. Of course, my dad's phone (ca. 1994) was a Toshiba TCP-9300; tall & thin. Both phones were infinitely smaller than the brikphones back then. Oh, and I remember my first phone number: 501-0010!!! (Who wouldn't? Too easy to remember ;) If someone wants a "phone-only" mobile, look no further than the Motorola F3... that is if you don't mind not having message alerts, reading SMS one *word* at a time or doing well, most of the stuff you're used to. (I think my original Ericcson was much easier to use than the F3, mind you...) Motorola F3Simon Ward • Friday 9th November 2007 14:04 GMT
"One product for you - Motorola F3." Have you actually used one?! Ye flippin' gods it's horrible - Motorola really need to sack the chimps who are responsible for the usability (or not) of their phones. The F3 was high on my list until I actually tried one. The mental scars may go. Eventually. Nokia 6300 FTW - has a few bells and whistles which I could happily live without, but more importantly it will let you make calls and send text messages without making your jump through fiery hoops or, as was the case with my old XDA, crashing. Got in late...Trygve Henriksen • Friday 9th November 2007 14:12 GMT
in 1995 or 96, when I got a Nokia 2110, which was considered 'the best' at the time(just before it was replaced with the Nokia Banana 7110, and quality went out the window) It had the best reception I've ever seen, and when I bought a car-mounted hands-free for it in 1999, the shopkeeper told me that I didn't NEED an external antenna, and to just remove the connector at the bottom of the cradle so that it didn't interfere with the phone's built-in one... I once dropped it when fumbling for my office keys(on the third floor). I found the phone at the second floor, and the battery in the basement. except for a few scratches, it was still as good as new. my first phonemahoney • Friday 9th November 2007 14:18 GMT
I can't remember the model number, but it was sometime in the late 90's too. It was a grey Nokia, built like a tank. It was big, ugly and clumsy, and I loved it! It was bullet-proof. It survived many falls, (one of them being a 10 foot fall onto pavement) not to mention twice accidentally being submerged in water. When I bought a new phone, I gave it to my mom. She actually used it recently. The only reason she had to replace it was because the ear-piece's volume got progressively quieter over the years, until finally it was too hard to hear anything. Old phones...Hein Kruger • Friday 9th November 2007 19:38 GMT
...they're still the best. My first phone was a Nokia 2110, I didn't like it all that much - too heavy (it was a good self defence weapon on the streets of Johannesburg though). Later I upgraded to a 6110 (not the newer 6110 Navigator) which was quite a nice phone - although the screen went haywire after a few years. The best phone ever made though was the Nokia 3330 - I was rather upset when I lost that one (after more than 4 years of excellent service, it just disappeared one drunken night). Nowadays I use a 3510i which would be a wonderful phone if not for the polyphonic ringtones and annoying orange lights on sides. Man, does that make me feel old...Alex • Friday 9th November 2007 20:53 GMT
You know you are getting old when you find yourself saying something like... 'I don't need a camera, bluetooth, mp3 or any of that rubbish, all i need is a phone'. It's funny how you talk about these things as if they are a part of ancient history. I remember when the networks started allowing SMS messaging across networks! That was the first, and last time they added really killer functionality :-) And i' not old ! Rabbit?Danny • Saturday 10th November 2007 03:13 GMT
The rabbit commercials. That takes me back. I remember some spotty oik (was he from Grange Hill?) that said you can make calls whereever you see the 'rabbit' (sounds trippy now I say it). My first 'phone was the Motorola v3688. I seem to remember it was call the v.small and the ads had a tiny baby tortoise crawling on it or something. Still pretty small but not as slim as todays models. The Old Sony'sReginald Perrin • Saturday 10th November 2007 03:53 GMT
I started out on an NEC P3 and then went to one of those tiny (at the time) Sony's with the flip down boom mic. I loved the Sony, a fantastic piece of kit that only failed once. I was riding up to Hollyhead from Cambridge to get the late night ferry to Dublin and put it in my tank bag, my magnetic tank bag. They warranty replaced it. I then got a non-descript Mitsubishi and a Nokia until I got the mother of all cool phones, the Nokia 8810, what a chrome beauty. I didn't want to change that phone. Now I have a BlackBerry and life is just much more interrupted. Take a good look, gentlemen...Marco • Saturday 10th November 2007 13:47 GMT
...that was when a phone was a phone. @ MahoneyGreg Ayres • Saturday 10th November 2007 14:50 GMT
I think that sounds like the Nokia 1610. I sold phones at the time and someone had tried to nick one of these off one of our customers. He simply battered the bloke with it. I don't think the iPhone has quite the same potential as a weapon! @Tom OlivaA J Stiles • Monday 12th November 2007 10:08 GMT
It matters not about IMEI blocking. The little s#!tbags who steal mobile phones *do not care* that the phones they have stolen are useless to them. It's enough for them to know that you have been deprived of your property. While we're reminiscing, my first *digital* mobile was a Nokia 5110, certainly not a bad handset; though I had owned an analogue mobile (branded "People's Phone", who were taken over by Vodafone) since 1995. My first phone.Richard Vanags • Monday 12th November 2007 13:22 GMT
It seems like a life time ago. But my first phone was a Nokia Talkman 620. Huge,heavy and crap battery life! But it worked and I almost always had a signal. It was a car phone with a battery stuck to it but I could run my business and keep in touch with others while I was out. But as I was one of the first in my town to own a portable (mobile would be stretching it!) phone, mates would call me from work just to see where I was and it was embassasing to answer a phone in town with people looking at you as if you were weird. I would have got less attention if I walked round naked! The period for commenting on this story has finished |
Review of the WeekAdvent 4211
Most Wanted PhonesReview FinderAccessories
Price FinderTop Stories
Channels
On Other Register sites…
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||