Das Telefon hat geringfügige Gebrauchsspuren, das Telefon funktioniert voll, wurde nur mit einer Ukrainischen SIM-Karte getestet, alles auf dem Foto ist enthalten. Die Sprache im Telefon kann auf Englisch umgestellt werden. Die Lieferung dauert 15 bis 25 Tage
Overheard in a pub, c. 1987... Two yuppies, one male, one female, were discussing pets. The male yuppie had a Nokia Cityman or similar on the table in front of him. Male yuppie: "I love my tortoise. A friend since childhood." Female yuppie: "Oh, I prefer cats to tortoises, James." She eyed his brick, longingly. "Of course, what I REALLY need is a cell phone..." NMT, the world's first international cellular mobile telephone network, had opened in Scandinavia in 1981. In 1987, the Nokia Mobira Cityman, the world's first NMT hand portable, and Nokia's very first hand held mobile phone, was launched. "Yuppie toys! What do they want mobile phones for? Ridiculous! Haven't they ever heard of phone boxes?!" ----- A Nokia Cityman in its box, which had a small plastic handle so, if desired, phone and charger could easily be carried around together. ----------------------------------- Above the cover to the Nokia Mobira Cityman instruction manual - the 1988 edition. Note the yellow, red and grey design - reflecting the 1980s trend for contrasting bright and dull colours. Below, selected pages from the manual. The Mobira Senator, Nokia's first mobile, a not-actually-terribly-mobile car phone, was released in 1982. I'm not sure when (or if) it first appeared in England. It was around 1987 that I first set eyes on a hand held mobile phone. Initially, I was most impressed - amazing - imagine being able to phone people wherever you might be! This went on for a year or so, then I decided they looked rather like walkie talkies, and, judging by the number of yuppies stalking out of the pub with their bricks because the reception was lousy inside, they didn't seem that great. So my fascination faded. Mobiles later shrank, went digital, became dirt cheap and all singing, all dancing, but I still don't have one. I like to be away from the phone when I'm out, there's no need for me to have a mobile, so I don't. Having been left behind, I still find myself thinking of them as "yuppie toys" at times! That's what we called them in the late 1980s. For all its sophisticated appeal back in 1987, the Nokia Cityman was basically a clonking great brick. So when did mobile phones start to shrink? See here for more... For captures from a 1988 television advertisement for Eagle Star investment plans, starring Rowan Atkinson (Blackadder) and the Nokia Cityman see here. Go back to the unveiling of the first commercially available hand held mobile phone EVER here. ------------------------------------------
Eran los iPhones de nuestros tiempos ¡Apuesto a que tuviste alguno de ellos!
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Let me tell you, we have come a long, long way.
Nokia 3210 Launched March 1999 Launched twenty years ago, the Nokia 3210 was a hugely popular mobile phone that helped to define what consumers expected from such a thing. Easy to use, cute to look at and quite a lot of fun as well, the 3210 came at a time when the mobile market was really beginning to take off. One of the most notable features of the 3210 was that it had an internal antenna – one of the very first phones on the market to offer this. This lead to a more elegant design, and it had the practical advantage of not snagging on things like phones with a stick-out bit did. Although the phone only had a quite small monochrome display, you could easily brighten the 3210 up with changeable covers. There were three pre-installed games including the legendary Snake. There was a ringtone composer for making simple monophonic tunes, and the SMS functionality had a few graphics thrown in for good measure. On top of that, the 3210 was robust and a single charge could give it enough power for more than a week’s standby time and hours of talktime. A year later the Nokia 3310 tweaked the formula with a more compact design, which was also a huge success. Both the 3210 and 3310 ended up as iconic devices for the growing consumer market, and today an unlocked 3210 in good condition can cost you about £35 or so. Image credit: Nokia
On April 3, 1973, from a Manhattan street corner -- 6th Ave. between 53rd and 54th -- Motorola’s Martin Cooper placed the world’s first mobile phone call. To his rival, no less.