Nokia 3100

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Nokia 3100
Nokia 3100
Manufacturer Nokia
Carrier AT&T Wireless/Cingular
Screen 128x128 4096 color CSTN
Camera 640x480 VGA
(sold separately, added via Pop-Port)
Operating system Series 40
Memory 350 KiB
Networks 3100:
Flag of Europe GSM 900/1800/1900

3100b:
Flag of the United States GSM 850/1800/1900

3105:
CDMA2000 1xRTT
Connectivity None
Battery BL-5C, 850 mA·h
Physical size 102 x 43 x 15.2 mm
Weight 99 g
Form factor Candybar
Successor Nokia 3200

The Nokia 3100 is a triband-GSM cellphone released on the 17th of June 2003 as an entry-level phone from Nokia, designed primarily for the younger market.

The Nokia 3100 was developed from the Nokia 3510i and Nokia 7250i models.

The phone is equipped with a 128x128 pixel passive colour display (4096 colors/12-bit), Java MIDP 1.0, XHTML and WAP browser, GPRS, Pop-Port connectivity and Lithium-ion battery. It is also capable of playing polyphonic MIDI files, which can be used as ringtones.

Contents

[edit] Menu system

The Nokia 3100 uses Nokia's Series 40 platform firmware that uses large static icons rather than animated icons that are used on some of the other Nokia phones.

The menu has 14 main categories:

  1. Messages - This consists of a multimedia and text messages editor
  2. Call register - It records the duration of calls and connections and used phone numbers
  3. Phone book - A phone book with contacts editor
  4. Profiles - User profiles for various situations (silent, loud, general, etc.)
  5. Settings - All phone settings are stored here
  6. Alarm clock - A simple alarm clock
  7. Gallery - Small file manager in which you can store images and ringtones
  8. Calendar - Calendar with notes and reminders
  9. Games - Directory for Java games
  10. Applications - Directory for applications
  11. Extras - Some extra tools like calculator, countdown timer and stopwatch
  12. Services - WAP browser and WAP settings
  13. Go to - settings for "Go to" menu, all most used functions are stored here as shortcuts
  14. SIM Application Toolkit menu - this contains information stored in SIM card such as network bonus services or pay services (appears only if the used SIM card offers these services)

The phone can send and receive text and multimedia messages with ringtones and images in BMP, JPEG, PNG and GIF formats. The basic 3100 does not have any voice recorder, radio receiver, MP3 player or camera, while the 3100b version supports voice recording. A camera can be added to the phone via its Pop-Port.

This was one of the most popular Nokia phones in Europe and United States.[citation needed]

In 2004 Nokia released the Nokia 3120 phone, which is different from the 3100 in having a new metallic effect covers and a revised keypad.

The Nokia 3200 builds on the features of the Nokia 3100, and incorporates more features from the Nokia 7250i, such as a built-in CIF-resolution camera.

[edit] Variants

[edit] Nokia 3100 (RH-19)

The basic version, intended to be used in European GSM networks. It works in GSM 900/1800/1900.

[edit] Nokia 3100b (RH-50)

This version intended to be used in American GSM networks. It works in GSM 850/1800/1900.

Differences from the basic 3100:

  • Additional main menu interface is present, referred to as Grid in phone's settings menu (the original interface is referred to as Line)
  • TTY/TTD option in MenuSettingsEnhancement settings; note that this menu appears only if the phone has been connected to some enhancement device (as referred to by Nokia), for example, to a headset or a TTD
  • Voice recording feature, allowing to record 1 min long pieces of speech, sound or an active call
  • World Clock application included

[edit] Nokia 3105

The CDMA version of the Nokia 3100, working in CDMA2000 1xRTT networks. It is physically similar to the 3100 except for a built-in flashlight and a slightly different shape of the rear battery cover; the phone's firmware is more feature-reach than the basic 3100 or 3100b (e.g.: voice tags and voice commands, Organizer menu, etc.)

The Nokia 3105 was used in Australia on the Hutchison Orange network until the closure of the CDMA network in Australia in late 2006. All customers on the Orange network were then moved to Hutchison's 3G network "3".

[edit] External links

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