This update to the Strobe / SwitchBack is thinner and lighter with a sleeker design and and steps up to a megapixel camera. Other features are similar, including a large outer display with full ...
This bar-style iDEN phone is the thinnest and lightest iDEN phone to date. The specs and features are otherwise similar to the i415, but with longer battery life and an internal antenna.
This affordable messaging phone sports a bar design that slides open to reveal a QWERTY text keyboard. Other key features include Bluetooth, a 1.3 megapixel camera, speakerphone, and a memory card ...
This otherwise-typical CDMA clamshell phone sports a unique keypad with shortcut keys between the number keys, for swift access to key functions. Features are similar to the Wave AX-380, but ...
This basic GSM phone puts the features of the T229 into a slider body and bumps up the display resolution. Key features include Bluetooth, camera, mobile web browser, and Java for downloadable games.
This major upgrade to the 8300 adds Bluetooth, music player, memory card slot, EVDO high-speed data. The camera has also been upgraded to 1.3 megapixel, and the display to QVGA resolution.
This uniquely-shaped, affordable messaging phone sports a landscape display and slide-out QWERTY keyboard. Other key features include a music player, stereo Bluetooth, memory card slot, 1.2 ...
The first color-screen model in Nokia's "active" class of ruggedized phones. Primary features include Java downloadable applications, GPRS high-speed data, and MMS multimedia messaging. Can be ...
An entry-level tri-band GSM phone with a color display. Features also include Java, MMS, GPRS data, voice memo, and polyphonic ringtones. This phone has not been released yet *.
This update to the popular R225 adds a color display. Other features of this entry-level GSM phone include Java (MIDP 2.0), MMS, GPRS high-speed data, and voice memo.
This entry-level Android phone includes a 5-inch HD display, 8-megapixel camera, 3.5mm audio jack, removable battery, and a memory card slot.
At three stores, CVS is testing a new type of lock for its "display cabinets" that can be unlocked by consumers with their own phone, instead of requiring an employee with a key to access merchandise.
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