The model is still[when?] in use in many parts of the world and has proved to be a durable product. By many users it is considered as the trend setter phone which proved to be a bright milestone for its manufacturer. The phone was intended to replace the popular 6310i as the predominant business class model in the Nokia range. It should not be confused with the newer Nokia 6600 fold, Nokia 6600 slide and Nokia 6600i phones which have little resemblance to the original 6600. A variant of the Nokia 6600 was launched in the U.S. market as the Nokia 6620.

The Nokia 6600 has a 65,536 color 176 x 208 pixel display and a 640 x 480 pixel camera whereas the Sony SO505iS has a 262,144 color 240 x 320 display and a 1280  960 pixel camera. Both displays are bright, but the Sony display and camera win.


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They're about the same size and weight, but the 6600 feels much more comfortable in my hand. Warm, round and buttons in the right place. The SO505iS is cold and a bit awkward (as if a digital camera and a phone got merged in the machine in "The Fly"). Having said that, the SO505iS is much better than the SO505i that it replaces. It's thinner and generally better designed. (The antenna doesn't stick out of your chin, the camera turns on when you open the camera cover, etc.)

The SO505iS runs J2ME and Flash applications whereas the 6600 runs J2ME and Symbian applications. The UI on the 6600 is utilitarian and simple whereas the Sony sports an animated background and a OS X sort of zooming icon wheel. The Sony has a two speaker stereo system and a stereo mini-plug for headphones where you can listen to music and watch videos from the proprietary memory stick in their proprietary media format. (You can record your favorite TV shows onto your memory stick and watch them on the train.)

The biggest difference is that you have to be a rocket scientist to figure out all of the message and data modes on the 6600. The blessing and the horror of the open system is that 6600 has to deal with all of the carrier inconsistencies and trying to figure out how to get online with the 6600 reminded me of just how screwed up the telco standardization process is. The SO505iS, on the other hand comes from the dictatorship of Docomo so what it lacks in flexibility and openness, it benefits in simplicity. Shoot a photo, click and send. Moblog away. I have yet to be able to send a picture via email from my 6600.

I would probably have a different opinion if I still used my Vaio, but the SO505iS really doesn't want to have anything to do with my Mac. The 6600 on the other hand, loves my Mac, talking to it in Bluetooth and even happily becoming a gprs modem for it. Zooming in a cab in San Francisco with my 6600 in my pocket and my PowerBook on my lap online was a great feeling. (Thanks for showing me how to do this Rael!)

Having said that, this is a totally useless review because you can't use the 6600 in Japan because we don't have a GSM network and you can't use the SO505iS anywhere outside of Japan because it uses Docomo's proprietary PDC network, or rather Docomo uses the SO505iS. Thus apples and oranges.

If you're in Japan but you like the idea of the 6600, try one of the Fujitsu phones on FOMA that use Symbian OS. i.e. F2051, F2102 or better yet F900iT, which with Bluetooth should let you use it as a modem for your Mac, and hopefully will get iSync support.

I have recently purchased a SO505iS phone, and I have loved every bit of it. The simplicity and the fact that anything you want to do is just a click away makes it so great. I have only just moved to Japan to live here and before I left, the phone i would have purchased was the nokia 6600. It would be great if any one could come back to me with a few tips on the music panel on the DOCOMO phone, particularly, placing songs on it. It would be much appreciated.

Good review :). One question, how do you get the 6600 to act as a GPRS modem. I used to be able to do this with my 3650, and copied the settings over, but they've never worked. Any pointers on this ?.

Hello!

First of all, thx for your review on the SO505is!Even if it was meant as a sparing between you, yourself and your nokia, it made me buy a great keitai. I was torn between the sony and the panasonic, although I can't see why anymore(=________=')?

Would you happen to know (I'm sure you do^^) where I could D\L an IRC client for my docomo? and some nice a-ppli games and stuff would be nice too (if I count on sony to entertain me, It'd best to terminate my I-mode subscription right now)

I thank you in advance, O Master of the Gadget,

and a nice day to every bloggers online.

hi i just brought a nokia 6600 

can anyone tell me how to download music videos on it 

 i have a great collection and i

would to have them with me while on the go 

 thanking you in advance

Hey guyz. today i got my 7600 but i don't like it as it is limited in applicatins and memory. (I have a 3g usim card). when i put it in my 6600 it said sim rejected as it is a 2.5G phone. I am really pissed off now. I saw in one of the forums that a guy had a 6600 which supports WCDMA and i am not sure if it means that it works with 3g usims and he is saying it works it japan! have a look:

 

url: -guide.com/forum/quereadisplay.html?0+3955

The interface for the cameras is highly special and usually undocumented but the challenge is getting to those tiny legs. CORRECTION: A bit of googling found this little circuit diagram of the 6600 - and there is a pinout for the camera.

Sold it and got a Nokia 7610 instead, which i also started to hate right away.. a bi smaller but very crappy keys, also no stereo sound output, no radio, etc. But a really good Picture camera though. Video recording sucked bigtime on this (6600 was alot better).

I have been working with the 6600 for the last month pretty extensively, developing a GPS tracking system. If you want it for business/application use its great, but for general use it is very slow, and battery life isn't fantastic.

The Nokia 6600 Slide is a compact slider phone that isn't as powerful or exciting as the honking great N96, but it doesn't have to be. This is a simple, well-designed phone that we think we're falling in love with -- or at least developing a very strong crush.

The best thing about the 6600 Slide is how good it feels to hold. It's not too light, so it doesn't feel cheap, and it's not too heavy, so it won't weigh you down. This is truly Goldilocks' phone.


On the back of the 6600 Slide there's a 3.2-megapixel camera that comes with an LED photo light. Notice the shiny battery cover -- it'll pick up fingerprints, but it looks great when it's polished.

Nokia sometimes comes up with two physically different versions of the same phone. The 6600 is a case in point and Nokia sent me both versions to look at. The 6600 Slide and the 6600 Fold differ in price and design, but I far prefer the Slide, which SIM-free is a cheaper bet too (223 inc VAT vs 260 inc VAT from the Nokia online store as I write). One day I may give the Fold a run through, but not today.



Physically the 6600 Slide is everything a slider phone should be. It is small when closed, quite small when opened, well weighted so it is not top heavy when opened, and it has enough front controls for you to get by without opening the slide too often.

The Nokia 6600 phone features new advanced imaging features, including a bright 65,536-color TFT display and camera equipped with digital zoom. These complement a built-in video recorder with audio and a RealOne Player for playback and streaming of 3GPP-compatible and RealMedia video clips. Multimedia functions are enhanced by templates for MMS messages and a Media Gallery for organizing digital content captured or downloaded with the phone. Advances in phone features include support for Java, MIDP 2.0, True Tones, themes, and personalization of clock and calendar sounds. (For more info visit www.nokia.com/6600) 0852c4b9a8

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