Orange Rio
The Orange Rio is a rebadged version of ZTE's X991. It is sold on the Orange network, and is a BlackBerry-styled phone directed to people on budgets or young users, with a QWERTY keyboard and a 2.4" touchscreen.
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Brand | Orange |
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Manufacturer | ZTE Corporation |
Series | ZTE-G |
Compatible networks | Dual band – GSM 900/1800 |
First released | 2011, United Kingdom |
Successor | Orange Rio II |
Type | Feature phone |
Form factor | Bar phone |
Operating system | Proprietary operating system, no upgrades |
Storage | 6MB internal |
Removable storage | 16GB SDHC card |
Battery | Replaceable |
Data inputs | Resistive touchscreen + QWERTY keyboard |
Display | 2.4in 320x240 pixels TFT LCD with touch screen |
Rear camera | 2Mpx sensor with autofocus |
Sound | Speaker, 3.5mm audio jack, Bluetooth headset support, vibration motor |
Connectivity | Mini USB |
Specifications
The Orange Rio has a 2.4 inch resistive touchscreen, unlike many other BlackBerry handsets and has a 320x240 (QVGA) resolution. However, it lacks 3G or Wi-Fi connectivity, and has Class 10 GPRS connectivity. It connects and charges using the mini-USB standard. It is a 2G handset. It is shipped with Opera's Opera Mini, and supports J2ME so users can load applications at their own will.
gollark: It's very mean of them to do that. What if I want the preshared key? WHAT THEN?
gollark: You could just... store the key.
gollark: It really wouldn't.
gollark: "oh yes, we force you to have a physical device for storing something like 100 bytes of data for no reason, so instead of just DOING IT IN SOFTWARE the obvious answer is to solder in a special physical device"
gollark: eSIM cards are a horrible workaround.
External links
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