Nokia 7700
The Nokia 7700 is a smartphone produced by Nokia, announced in October 2003 but never released.[1] It was expected to be the first smartphone running the Series 90 GUI on Symbian OS and Nokia's first pen-based device, intending to compete against handsets like Sony Ericsson P800.[2] At announcement Nokia dubbed it a "media device."[3]
Manufacturer | Nokia |
---|---|
Compatible networks | GPRS, HSCSD, EDGE |
Availability by region | Never released |
Successor | Nokia 7710 |
Related | Nokia 9500 Communicator Nokia N-Gage |
Dimensions | 134 × 80 × 22 mm |
Mass | 183 g |
Operating system | Symbian OS / Nokia Series 90 |
Memory | 64 MB |
Removable storage | MMC |
Data inputs | Touchscreen |
Display | 640 × 320 |
Rear camera | 640 × 480 VGA |
Connectivity | Bluetooth, Nokia Pop-Port (USB) |
Features
Compatible with GSM/HSCSD/GPRS/EDGE 900/1800/1900 MHz networks, the 7700 featured a wide, 3.5-inch touch-screen colour LCD with a resolution of 640 × 320 pixels which is the first smartphone with 2:1 aspect ratio and supporting 65,000 colours. It had 64 MB of internal memory and a MultiMedia Card (MMC) slot. It also included an integrated VGA camera with a maximum resolution of 640 × 480 pixels, an integrated FM radio, Bluetooth, USB and Nokia's proprietary Pop-Port interface for connectivity purposes.
The 7700 was to include a comprehensive application suite (such as a complete PIM suite, 'full' web browser, email client and an office suite comprising Word Processor, Spread-Sheet and a PowerPoint viewer) and supported Java MIDP 2.0 applications. It was also to be the first phone to support Visual Radio,[4] and the first Nokia phone to support DVB-H mobile television with the addition of the Nokia Streamer SU-6 accessory.[5]
Cancellation
The Nokia 7700 was cancelled in mid-2004.[6] Several theories for the cancellation were put forward at the time: Nokia was refocusing on 'normal' phones due to decreasing market share; the phone would be too late to market; and the phone was unattractive and bulky. It also featured 'sidetalking' like the N-Gage, a feature that had attracted a great deal of negative publicity.[6]
Successor
The Nokia 7710 followed shortly later with increased memory, a different design, no 'sidetalking' and other improvements.[6]</ref> However, the 7700 was nevertheless used for further trials of DVB-H.[7][8]
Pricing
As stated above, the Nokia 7700 was never released to the public. It was only released to Nokia's R&D (Research and Development) groups. A few models, estimated 20, were distributed prior to Nokia's decision to discontinue the model before full-on production. Pricing is thus very difficult to assess due to lack of official sales. Nevertheless, a few models were sold on eBay since Nokia's announcement of discontinuation. The lack of independent data to verify the sale records on eBay has caused some to overestimate the actual cost of the model. The phone is nevertheless considered by a number of Nokia collectors to be a rare piece.
References
- "Nokia Press release - Multiple media go mobile with the Nokia 7700" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on December 18, 2006.
- http://www.cxotoday.com/story/nokia-7700/
- at 14:48, John Lettice 28 Oct 2003. "Nokia's 7700 'media device' – first shot in the PDA wars?". www.theregister.co.uk.
- "Nokia brings pictures to FM radio". February 10, 2004 – via news.bbc.co.uk.
- Lehto, Tero. "Kosketusnäytöllinen mediapuhelin Nokia 7700". Tivi.
- "Nokia 7700 - Mobile Gazette - Mobile Phone News". www.mobilegazette.com.
- "Nokia Cans TV Phone, But Not TV Plans - Forbes.com". www.forbes.com.
- Nokia - Developer Discussion Boards - DVB-H streaming with Nokia 7700 and 7710 - 2004-11-07, 22:27 Archived 2007-08-25 at the Wayback Machine