
The latest Nokia 6500 Slide Black has been launched in the UK and adds to the already popular Nokia 6500 Slide Silver edition.
The new black Nokia 6500 slide offers exactly the same features and technology as the original silver edition but with a stylish housing and new nysterious Black exterior.
This new capable phone 3G has been initially released on Orange in the UK with the most anticipated releases of the network in short, whilst the original Nokia 6500 Slide has been available for more 3 months on Orange, O2, T-Mobile, 3 Mobile and Vodafone, as well as pay as you go and SIM free phone.
Part of the Nokia 6500 range, the new Nokia 6500 Slide Black is in good company with the range of Nokia 6500 Classic, which has also recently expanded to accommodate a new color variant of Bronze.
The Nokia 6500 Slide offers slightly better power management than the Nokia 6500 Classic, with 6 hours of talk time and 310 hours standby and includes all basic functions available in the Classic environment of 6500, as the built-in MP3 player, web browser, email, instant messaging, EDGE, UMTS and support, etc..
And as with the Classic version, Nokia 6500 Slide is a 3G enabled phone, but the camera has been boasted up 3.2 mega pixels with the introduction of Carl Zeiss optics and the inclusion of a secondary camera for video calling is a bonus and also have FM radio with RDS.
Based on the design of the Nokia 6280 and 6288 and unlike the Nokia 6500 Classic, this version of 6500 is a slider.
The new Black Steel deck provides extra protection against impact and scratches, while the extensive features take care of business.
Other enhancements available with slide version of the Nokia 6500 include a TV out connector for video clips and images can play / watch on your TV screen and TV which allows video calls and conference calls and then you also have the separate stereo Bluetooth A2DP support.
The biggest difference between the Nokia 6500 Slide phones phones and the Nokia 6500 Classic is that these new mobile phones can make and receive face to face video calls over 3G, though the Classic versions are compatible with 3G services that do not contribute to the video call.
About the Author:
The Nokia 6500 Slide Black and original Nokia 6500 Slide are two of four new phones from the 6500 range. Should you require further information please visit our mobile phones shop online.
Article Source: ArticlesBase.com – Nokia 6500 Slide Black Joins the Nokia 6500 Slide Silver UK
|
|
Royal Canes 80631 Sleek Black-Finished Derby Cane with Stainless Steel Collar $45.65 |
|
|
Utility Steel Folding Nanual Transport Wheelchair Black $511.29 |
|
|
Steel Folding Transport Nanual Wheelchair Black Leather $478.83 |
|
|
Medical Steel Folding Nanual Wheelchair Black Footrests $445.08 |
|
|
Medical Steel Folding Nanual Wheelchair Black 16″/18″ $445.08 |
|
|
Medical Steel Folding Nanual Transport Wheelchair Black $449.72 |
|
|
STEEL BOWLING RAMP – TWO PIECE – BLACK $264.99 |
|
|
Adjustable Center Balance Offset Cane Black Steel $67.28 |
|
|
Cuisinart ICE-30BC Pure Indulgence 2-Quart Automatic Frozen Yogurt, Sorbet, and Ice Cream Maker $67.99 … |
|
|
Krups 203 Electric Coffee and Spice Grinder with Stainless-Steel Blades … |
|
|
Cuisinart CSB-76 SmartStick 200-Watt Immersion Hand Blender The versatile stick design of the Cuisinart Smart stick Hand Blender lets users blend ingredients right in pots, pitchers, bowls, or clear plastic beaker that’s included. A powerful 200-watt motor operates with an easy one-touch control. Blends drinks, purees soup, mixes pancake and crepe batters in seconds! Both stainless steel blending shaft and beaker are dishwasher-safe…. |
|
|
Aja $2.70 History gives Steely Dan’s Walter Becker and Donald Fagen the last, hearty laugh on this, the crown jewel in their remarkable canon of ’70s Mensa pop. Sneaking onto the charts a half-decade earlier with sinuous, jazz-inflected “rock,” the dysfunctional duo’s acerbic, anti-heroic visions had been critically lauded for their band identity and killer guitar riffs, then promptly challenged when the t… |
|
|
It Takes a Nation of Millions $2.53 It Takes a Nation of Millions was the sign that hip-hop had exploded like a grenade. A rap record as abrasive, hardcore, and eloquent as a JFK speech, the 1988 disc is one classic track after another: tense, multilayered, harmonically wild music. Chuck D. declaims like a master preacher with foil Flavor Flav’s voice darting around his. They’ve got the desperate energy of people fighting for their … |
|
|
Feel the Steel $7.72 Steel Panther are, by far, the greatest 80′s band to not come from the 80′s! Their debut album Feel The Steel oozes with so much sleaze it’s as if Spinal Tap got dragged through the Sunset Strip back in 1988. All the joking and humor of the songs aside, Feel The Steel is amazing! Stellar musicianship, amazing vocals, lyrics and top-notch production make this album nothing short of the best party y… |
|
|
Man With the Steel Whip [VHS] $13.95 … |
|
|
Valley of Decision [VHS] $19.98 Based on Marcia Davenport’s novel and set in 1870, Valley of Decision details the romance between a housemaid named Mary Rafferty (Greer Garson) and her employer’s son, Paul Scott (Gregory Peck). Paul’s father, William (Donald Crisp), owns a Pittsburgh steel mill where Mary’s father, Pat (Lionel Barrymore), was crippled; Pat believes he wouldn’t have suffered his accident if William had taken more… |
|
|
Steel Helmet [VHS] $12.99 Sergeant Zack (Gene Evans) is the only survivor after his platoon is executed by North Koreans. He pulls himself along painfully, hands tied behind his back with his own bootlaces, until he is discovered by a 10-year-old South Korean boy. He dubs the boy Short Round, and the two eventually hook up with an infantry squad. They find a Buddhist temple, which they take over to use as an observation po… |
|
|
The Dark Knight (Single-Disc Widescreen Edition) $2.49 The Dark Knight arrives with tremendous hype (best superhero movie ever? posthumous Oscar for Heath Ledger?), and incredibly, it lives up to all of it. But calling it the best superhero movie ever seems like faint praise, since part of what makes the movie great–in addition to pitch-perfect casting, outstanding writing, and a compelling vision–is that it bypasses the normal fantasy element of th… |