The 3310 was the one the cover kept falling off. I have no idea how it got a reputation for build quality.
(, Wed 7 Dec 2022, 18:45, Reply)
it was the battery, software and non existent memory that I had an issue with
(, Wed 7 Dec 2022, 19:35, Reply)
Want a record of what you said? Simply write your message, save it as a draft, go to your drafts folder and find and send the message which will then give it a nice little envelope icon. Oh yeah, your phone holds only about a dozen text messages, so you'd better delete some of those drafts if you want your inbox updated.
(, Wed 7 Dec 2022, 19:46, Reply)
I bought one online, installed it (back when opening up mobile 'phones was trivial), built a DIY data cable utilising a pencil eraser and stripboard pins for the proprietary connector and unlocked the hidden menu option...
(, Wed 7 Dec 2022, 20:55, Reply)
Even if you did have to wedge a bit of paper in it to stop the battery pack falling off
(, Wed 7 Dec 2022, 20:33, Reply)
the last mobile 'phone I had any positive feelings towards...
(, Wed 7 Dec 2022, 21:01, Reply)
Solid, dependable and they never seemed to develop faults. Unlike the 7210, or anything with Motorola printed on it.
Then there was the Ericsson T68, which in rare cases had a bug where it would stop picking up a signal; the solution was (not kidding) to drop it head first onto a table from about four inches up.
At one point I had a lovely T39 in cream. I wish I’d never sold it.
(, Wed 7 Dec 2022, 21:11, Reply)
The original battery still outlasts my daily driver...
(, Thu 8 Dec 2022, 19:09, Reply)