Introduction
A while back Nokia released the 6600 pair - the slide and the fold - which we fell for, big time. The seemingly more popular sibling got an update and the 6600i slide will keep on cashing in. Slightly revamped, it brings a beefier camera and a new paintjob to boot.
Looks have changed just a bit and we honestly think they did itright. The consciously minimalist design of the original didn't leave much room for frills anyway. Alright, the 6600i slide is a no-frills package overall, but don't go saying we didn't warn you. It's enjoyable and addictive.
Key features:
Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE support, dual-band UMTS
2.2" 16M-color QVGA display 5 megapixel camera, autofocus and LED flash
VGA video recording at 15fps
S40 user interface, 5th edition Bluetooth (with A2DP)
microSD card slot (up to 16 GB), 1GB included
Ovi Maps for S40 come preinstalled Ovi Contacts, Share on Ovi, YouTube, MySpace and Facebook applications preinstalled
Really compact and extra smooth metal body
Sweet oval shapes and neat slider design
Accelerometer for tap-for-time and tap-to-mute
Main disadvantages:
No HSDPA
Display brightness is quite low
Poor browser and no Opera Mini preinstalled
Memory card slot under the battery, no hot-swap
No dedicated shutter key Below par camera quality
No 3.5 mm audio jack or a two-piece headset in the box
No smart dialing No multi-tasking, especially uncomfortable in Ovi Contacts and the social networking applications
No office document viewer Loudspeaker loudness is only marginally improved
No need to tell you, the "i" in any Nokia model designation is there to save face. It's like Nokia saying: here's a phone that sells big, so be our guest - keep on buying it. It's more of a relaunch than an update. And we're not pointing fingers here - if you have a massive seller the first thing on your mind would be to keep it rolling.
Just remember the 6300 - it did wonders for the Finns, so the 6300i followed in due course. Yes, it added Wi-Fi to its predecessor's feature set but that can really be seen as an exception and was meant for select markets only. And by the way, Nokia might have a point. The 3G-enabled 6600 slide can do without WLAN and a better camera will perhaps serve its market better. Anyway, "i" models are incremental updates - they build on the previous device rather than turn it into something completely new. In that sense, the last people to be viewed as potential customers are current 6600 slide owners. If we were to upgrade from Nokia 6600 slide, we'd probably be considering Symbian - or maybe an all-in-one feature phone like the 6260 slide.
Accordingly, the real job of the 6600i slide is to pick up the customers the original missed and serve the Nokia midrange more in keeping with the time.
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