The Nokia 6630 is a 3G mobile phone announced by Nokia on 14 June 2004 and released in November.[1] It runs on Symbian OS 8.0a (Series 60 2nd Edition FP2). Codenamed Charlie during development, it is an evolution of the 6600 and 6620 smartphones, supporting tri-band GSM (run on lower operating systems).

The Nokia 6630 is the first phone ever that allows truly global roaming; previously GSM phones have had near-global coverage except in Japan where 2G phone standards were different. The 6630 automatically uses the W-CDMA network in Japan. Nokia 6650 and 7600 were also able to function in Japan, but they did not support GSM 1900, often needed in the United States and Canada (the Nokia 6651 has the GSM 1900).


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As opposed to the 6600 and 6620's VGA resolution digital camera (640480), the 6630 has a 1.3-megapixel camera (1280960). It can record video clips at the resolution of 176144, using H.263 video compression. Like the 6600 and 6620, the 6630 has Bluetooth capabilities and has a 176208 pixel 65,000-color TFT LCD. It comes with a hot-swappable DV-RS-MMC card, capacity 32 MB or 64 MB depending on the region where the phone is sold. Normal RS-MMC cards do not work with the 6630: it requires dual-voltage (1.8 V and 3.0 V) RS-MMC cards. Currently, it has been known to support up to 2 GB from a DV-RS-MMC but may support more.

The 6630 is capable of video calling using the main handset camera, however, a separate forward-facing camera is not featured. Nokia released a video call stand (PT-8) exclusively for the 6630 featuring a separate camera to enable face-to-face video calling. The video call stand requires a connection to mains power using a Nokia wall charger, which unfortunately restricts it to indoor 'desk-based' use. The 6630 was primarily marketed for its 3G data capabilities rather than video calling functionality. The succeeding Nokia 6680 featured a separate forward-facing camera for face-to-face video calling.

The Nokia 6638 is the CDMA variant of the mainline 6630. It is mostly identical to the GSM/UMTS model albeit with a redesigned fascia and rear panel as well as an expandable antenna. Other notable features are Bluetooth, POP3/IMAP support with 1.2 megapixel camera.[4]

In this long term review of the 6630 Steve finds much to recommend the Nokia 6630 and concludes that, whether bought cannily on a contract or snapped up in the final minutes of an auction on eBay, it could be just the bargain you need.

If you've been watching AllAboutSymbian over the last month, you'll have spotted my full review of the Nokia 6680, the very latest Series 60 smartphone that's actually available (the N Series being a few months away, in the real world). So what on earth am I doing here reviewing the 6630, a device that was announced last year (2004) and which has been on the streets for six months?

In fact, a little tardiness on the review front makes talking about value for money really, really easy. If you're looking for a cutting-edge Symbian smartphone and don't want to dig too deep into your pocket, the Nokia 6630 is easily the one to go for. All around the High Street, stores are offering the 6630 for free on quite modest SIM contracts, or you can pick one up on eBay, second-hand, for not much more than 100. When you consider that you're effectively getting a Symbian-powered mobile computer, plus (up to) 3G telephony/data, a stereo music player and a Megapixel camera, all for not an awful lot, it's hard to resist.

With the Symbian OS baseline constantly improving and with Series 60 v2 bringing interface and PIM application improvements by the score, we saw the Nokia 6600 and 7610, much better devices but still very limited in several areas. The Nokia 6630 was the first device of the 'next generation' of devices, with hardware improvements to match those in software. Looking back at the hit-list from those initial Series 60 smartphones, the 6630 has significantly improved PIM apps (intelligent display of appointments in the Day view, entry popups in Month view, etc.), a far more attractive and useful interface (themes, wrap around menus, etc.), great battery life, full stereo headset output, hot-swappable memory cards and a good Megapixel camera. Plus the third party software scene has matured and most applications you can think of have now been done. As mentioned in the Nokia 6680 review, this all adds up to a smartphone that offers genuine convergence and genuine usefulness.

So to the device itself. The Nokia 6630 is smaller than its spiritual predecessor, the 3650, and thankfully the circular keypad is now a traditional grid, with the Series 60 'extra' keys now the ones that help fill up the 'bulge'. The screen's very good in all lighting conditions and a light sensor at the top of the device switches on the keypad backlight if needed. The feel of the keys and navigator is good, although not quite up to the exemplary level of the 6680's. There's a (by now traditional) Pop-port connector on the bottom, for plugging in the supplied stereo headset or for mounting on the optional video calling stand. This last requirement will be a real pain for anyone buying the 6630 for outright 3G use, as you can't do two-way video calling using just the device as there's only the one camera and it's on the wrong side. If you need video calling, look at the 6680 instead.

Messaging is virtually unchanged from earlier incarnations, but then it does the job. A Symbian smartphone can probably never be your only email monitor, which is why there's no attempt to delete emails from the IMAP4 or POP3 server. It's simply a way of seeing what's waiting, of grabbing anything important and responding if necessary. And this the 6630 allows with relative aplomb. The only fly in the ointment is that there's no readout of message size when displaying email headers. Instead, you have to go burrowing into the menu for 'Message details' every single time. Please fix this, Nokia.

Extra applications shipped in the box include the read-only version of Quickoffice and, in line with the marketing of the 6630, a fun (but slow) 'Image manager', a (even slower) 'Photo editor' and a 'Video editor'. None of these applications are heavyweight, but they're still handy to have for novices. Miscellaneous utilities, of varying worth, include an Instant Messaging client, a units converter, a secure database (this doesn't sync to anything, though) and a 'File manager' for beginners that hides all the scary parts of the file system and just shows the bits that Nokia wants you to know about 8-) A generic Bluetooth keyboard driver is supplied and worked well with my Think Outside keyboard.

As mentioned in the 6680 review, I've long railed against Nokia for excluding the possibility that people might want to experience true convergence and listen to their music on their smartphone, with most previous Nokia smartphones only having mono audio output. With the 6630 and 6680 (and siblings and successors), there's full stereo output via the Pop-port connector and quality over the supplied headset was very good. Nokia intend you to listen to your music in MP3 format using RealPlayer, but canny users will want to encode their favourite CDs in Ogg Vorbis format and use the freeware OggPlay instead. This has far superior tag sorting, is skinnable, is more efficient and produces louder output, quite apart from being able to cram twice as much music on your card. Ok, so your Nokia smartphone many not be an iPod killer, but it can comes damn close for casual listening purposes.

As with the 6680, general connectivity is almost perfect, with exemplary Bluetooth performance, good PC Suite 6.6 integration with your PC data, and support for every telephony standard across the world, from the various GSM bands to full 3G, although the usual caveats about being beholden to the mobile data policy of your 3G network provider apply here. The only omission is infrared, for which I still have a soft spot. Every time you come across someone with an older infrared-only PDA you'll wish the 6630 had the same.

I mentioned the 6630's unique position in the market right at the start of this long term review. Money, as has often been observed, makes the world go around and we're all looking for a bargain. The Nokia 6630, whether bought cannily on a contract or snapped up in the final minutes of an auction on eBay, could be just the bargain you need. It has all the multi-tasking Symbian OS power you've been looking for, it's bang up to date and right now it needn't cost the earth.

The Nokia 6630 (type RM-1, codenamed Charlie) is a 3G Symbian smartphone announced on 14 June 2004 and released in November of the same year. It was a flagship phone with a 1.3 (effectively 1.23[1]) megapixel camera, and was also Nokia's first WCDMA/EDGE phone to run Series 60.[2]

The 6630 was the first Nokia phone to use the mobileBAE MIDI synthesizer; its soundbank is called Charlie, the codename of the model. This bank also appeared on later flagship models with mono speakers, such as its successors, the Nokia 6680 and Nokia N70.

Pre-installed software includes an e-mail client, a rudimentary web browser and Microsoft Office file viewer. It also includes support for MP3 and AAC playback at full quality (44.1 kHz, 16 bits, stereo), and the retail package includes stereo headphones with hands-free functionality.As opposed to the 6600 and 6620's VGA resolution digital camera (640480), the 6630 has a 1.3 MP camera (1280960). It can record video clips at the resolution of 176144, using H.263 video compression. Like the 6600 and 6620, the 6630 has Bluetooth capabilities and has a 176208 pixel 65,000-color TFT LCD. It comes with a hot-swappable DV-RS-MMC card, capacity 32 MB or 64 MB, depending on the region where the phone is sold. Normal RS-MMC cards do not work with the 6630: it requires dual-voltage (1.8 V and 3.0 V) RS-MMC cards. Currently, it has been known to support up to 2 GB from a DV-RS-MMC, but may support more.The 6630 is capable of video calling using the main handset camera, however, a separate forward-facing camera is not featured. Nokia released a video call stand (PT-8) exclusively for the 6630 featuring a separate camera to enable face-to-face video calling. The video call stand requires a connection to mains power using a Nokia wall charger, which unfortunately restricts it to indoor 'desk-based' use. The 6630 was primarily marketed for its 3G data capabilities rather than video calling functionality. The succeeding Nokia 6680 featured a separate forward-facing camera for face-to-face video calling. 0852c4b9a8

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