Nokia 3510

The Nokia 3510 is a mobile phone for the GSM network, introduced by Nokia on 12 March 2002.[1] The phone was the first Nokia phone to bring GPRS internet services to the mass market.[2]

Nokia 3510/3510i/3590
ManufacturerNokia
Compatible networks GSM-900/GSM-1800 (3510/3510i)
GSM-850/GSM-1900 (3590/3595)
TDMA-850/1900/AMPS-850 (3560)
First released2002
PredecessorNokia 3310 (3510)
Nokia 3395 (3590)
Nokia 3360 (3560)
SuccessorNokia 6010
Nokia 3100
RelatedNokia 3410
DimensionsLength: 11.9 cm x Depth: 2.28 cm x Width: 5.00 cm
Mass111 g (3.92 oz)
Removable storageNo
BatteryNiMH 950/1000mA·h BLC-2
  • Talk: 6.5 hours
  • Standby: 12.5 days (300 hours)
DisplayMonochrome, 96 x 65 pixels (3510/3590) or
12-bit color CSTN, 96 x 65 pixels (3510i/3520/3530/3560/3595)
Rear cameraNo
ConnectivityGPRS

An enhanced version, Nokia 3510i, introduced some time later on 6 September 2002 and released in December 2002.[3] It was one of the first phones with a color display. The phone has a Nokia Series 30 96 x 65 user interface. The 3510 has the multi-button user interface of the classic Nokia 2110. Along with Nokia 7210, it was the first Nokia device on the mass market with polyphonic ringtones (they were already on the Nokia 7650).[4]

GPRS is used for data transmission and mobile Internet WAP service. The Nokia 3510i model supports Java 2 ME that makes it possible for users to download and use Java applications (not supported by 3510), background images and polyphonic ringtones. The phone supports SMS and MMS messaging.[5][6] The 3510i is of the DCT4 hardware generation.

There was also a gaming-enhanced Xpress-on cover released as an official accessory for the 3510.[7]

Variants

The Nokia 3510i was being sold in Europe, Russia, Middle East and Africa, while the Nokia 3530 was being sold in Asia-Pacific, which operate on GSM 900/1800, and features a more conventional keypad.

The Nokia 3590 was a version of the 3510 for the North American market. It operates on GSM-1900 and GSM-850 networks. The phone was at one time available through the former AT&T GoPhone prepaid mobile phone service.

The Nokia 3595 operates on North American GSM-1900 and GSM-850 networks. Prior to the release of the 3595, the Nokia 3560 was released, with a more standard arrangement of the keypad, and operating on TDMA and AMPS for roaming. IS-136. The 3560 was released in the Spring of 2003 and was sold through early 2004 when TDMA accounts were no longer being activated. The 3560 came with more preloaded content than the 3595 since the phone was primarily designed for prepaid TDMA customers. The 3595 contains less preloaded content but enables users to download new content using GPRS, or MMS. The 3595 is often thought of as the GSM equivalent to the TDMA 3560, although it is actually an upgrade to the Nokia 3590 handset. The 3595 and 3590 faceplate and keypad buttons are interchangeable.

The Nokia 3595 includes an IM client for AOL Instant Messenger and ICQ in the latest firmware revisions.

A newer version of the 3595 is the Nokia 6010, which improves on the keypad and gives the phone a more business-oriented look. The 6010 also has corrected all of the software bugs that were previously found in the 3595 handset. The 6010 was discontinued by all major GSM carriers except T-Mobile in 2006.

Technical data

Model35103510i
CPU UPP8M v1.1UPP8M v2.2[8]
UEM UEMK v4.4UEMK v4.4[8]
RF MJOELNER S2006MJOELNER S2006[8]
Flashmemory 876,701 bytes876,701 bytes[9]

UEM - Universal Energy Management

Accessories

TypePartsnumber
BatteryBLC-2 LiON ; BMC-3 NiMH (3510 only)[10][11]
HeadsetHDC-5 (standard); HDB-5 (boom); HDD-1 (dual ear); HDC-10 (retractable);
CARK-134 (car kit); PPH-1 (no holder+antenna); HDR-1 (music);[12] HDE-2; LPS-3 (inductive)
Data cableOEM only or DIY
ChargerDDC-1 (standard); ACP-12 (fast & light)

Data port:

↑ Towards battery connector ↑
NC1-GND2-Vpp
3-Fbus RX4-Mbus5-Fbus TX

[13]

Fbus and Mbus uses 3,3 volt levels.

gollark: Technically, any Turi interpreter implementing ⛁ in one of the recommended ways works as a RAT.
gollark: it also randomly goes backwards and has a three-directional branch instruction.
gollark: I expect wide adoption in enterprise™ environments.
gollark: Turi has built-in twitter access capabilities, as well as being cloud-native because it has containers.
gollark: In fact, like lyricly!demote!establish!communism it's Turing-completer, or at least TuriExtended is.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.