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List of Nokia products
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The following is a list of products branded by Nokia.[1]
Current products and services
[edit]Products by Nokia Technologies
[edit]Wi-Fi routers
[edit]Digital audio
[edit]- Nokia OZO Audio
Smart TVs
[edit]Nokia markets smart TVs that run on Android TV.
Products by Nokia Networks
[edit]Nokia Networks is a multinational data networking and telecommunications equipment company headquartered in Espoo, Finland and wholly owned subsidiary of Nokia Corporation.
HMD Global products
[edit]HMD develops mobile devices under the Nokia brand since 2016. The company has signed an exclusive deal with Nokia allowing it to use the Nokia brand for its devices. All Nokia branded devices made by HMD are listed in the article linked above.
Past products and services
[edit]Mobile phones
[edit]Note:
- Phones in boldface are smartphones
- Status: D = discontinued; P = in production; C = cancelled
- DCT1-DCT4 = Nokia Digital Core Technology
- BB5.0 = Base Band 5 – Successor to DCT
- KaiOS = Mobile Linux distribution for keypad feature phones
- S60 = Software platform for smartphones
The Mobira/Nokia series (1982–1990)
[edit]The earliest phones produced by Nokia. These all use 1G networks.
| Phone model | Screen type | Released | Status | Technology | Generation | Form factor |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mobira Senator | Monochrome | 1982 January | D | NMT-450 | Unknown | Car Phone |
| Nokia Actionman | 1984 January | Unknown | ||||
| Nokia Actionman II | 1984 May | Unknown | ||||
| Nokia Talkman 320F | 1984 August | Unknown | ||||
| Nokia Talkman 520 | 1984 October | Unknown | Portable Phone | |||
| Nokia Talkman 620 | 1992 ? | Unknown | ||||
| Nokia Mobira Talkman | 1985 May | Unknown | Car Phone | |||
| Mobira Talkman 450 | 1985 | Unknown | Brick | |||
| Mobira Talkman 900 | 1987 | NMT-900 | Unknown | |||
| Nokia Talkman 510 | 1989 | NMT-450 | Unknown | |||
| Nokia Cityman 100 | 1990 | ETACS | Unknown | |||
| Nokia Cityman 190 | Unknown | |||||
| Mobira Cityman 150 | 1989 | NMT-900 | Unknown | |||
| SIP/Nokia Cityman 300 | 1992 | TACS | Unknown | |||
| Mobira Cityman 900 | 1987 | NMT-900 | Unknown | |||
| Mobira/Nokia Cityman 1320 | 1987 | TACS | Unknown |
Original series (1992–1999)
[edit]The last 1G phones by Nokia.
| Phone model | Screen type | Released | Status | Technology | Generation | Form factor |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nokia 100 | Monochrome | 1993 | D | AMPS/ETACS | Unknown | Bar |
| Nokia 101 | 1992 | D | Unknown | |||
| Nokia 104 | D | AMPS | Unknown | |||
| Nokia 105 | 1993 | D | Unknown | |||
| Nokia 107 | 1992 | D | Unknown | |||
| Nokia 116 | D | Unknown | Unknown | |||
| Nokia 121 | D | TACS/ETACS/NMT-450 | Unknown | |||
| Nokia 130 | 1993 | D | Unknown | Unknown | ||
| Nokia 150 | D | NMT-450 | Unknown | |||
| Nokia 180 | D | Unknown | Unknown | |||
| Nokia 191 | 1992 | D | AMPS | Unknown | ||
| Nokia 203 | 1995 | D | ETACS | Unknown | ||
| Nokia 211 | 1992 | D | AMPS | Unknown | ||
| Nokia 232 | 1994 | D | AMPS/TACS | Unknown | ||
| Nokia 239 | D | AMPS | Unknown | Bar (flip cover) | ||
| Nokia 250 | 1995 | D | NMT-450 | Unknown | Bar | |
| Nokia 252 | 1998 | D | AMPS/N-AMPS | Unknown | ||
| Nokia 282 | D | Unknown | Flip | |||
| Nokia 340 | 1995 | D | Unknown | Unknown | Bar | |
| Nokia 350 | D | NMT-450 | Unknown | |||
| Nokia 450 | 1996 | D | Unknown | |||
| Nokia 540 | 1997 | D | Unknown | |||
| Nokia 550 | D | Unknown | ||||
| Nokia 636 | 1995 | D | AMPS | Unknown | ||
| Nokia 638 | 1996 | D | Unknown | |||
| Nokia 640 | 1999 | D | NMT-450 | Unknown | ||
| Nokia 650 | 1998 | D | Unknown | |||
| Nokia 909 | 1995 | D | ETACS | Unknown | ||
| Nokia 918 | 1996 | D | AMPS | Unknown | ||
| Nokia 1000 | 1992 | D | AMPS/ETACS/TACS | DCT1 | ||
| Nokia Family Link | 1992 | D | ETACS | Unknown | ||
| Nokia Ringo | 1995 | D | NMT-900 | DCT1 | ||
| Nokia Ringo 2 | 1997 | D | ETACS | |||
| Nokia Ringo 3 | 1998 | D | ||||
| Nokia D.I.N.O | 1996 | D | TDMA/AMPS |
4-digit series
[edit]Nokia 1xxx (1992–2010)
[edit]The Nokia 1000 series was previously referred to as the 'Ultrabasic' offering. It included Nokia's most affordable phones with 2G network. They are mostly targeted towards developing countries and users who do not require advanced features beyond making calls and SMS text messages, alarm clock, calendar, and reminders. Several later models of the 1000 series features an FM radio and a built-in LED flashlight.
The 1000 series traditionally lacks cameras, with the exception of Nokia 1680 classic being the only one in the lineup to feature a camera.
| Phone model | Screen type | Released | Status | Technology | Chipset, HW platform | Form factor | Camera | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nokia 1006 | 128x160px 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2009 | D | CDMA | Unknown | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 1011 | Monochrome alphanumeric | 1992 | D | GSM | Unknown, DCT1 | Bar | None | First GSM phone |
| Nokia 1100 | 96x65 Monochrome | 2003 | D | Nokia UPP2M, DCT4 | Bar | None | best-selling phone along with 1110 | |
| Nokia 1101 | 96x65 Monochrome | 2005 | D | Bar | None | |||
| Nokia 1108 | 96x65 Monochrome | D | Bar | None | ||||
| Nokia 1110 | 96x68 Monochrome | D | Nokia UPP4M, DCT4 | Bar | None | best-selling phone along with 1100 | ||
| Nokia 1110i | 96x68 Inverse Monochrome | 2006 | D | Bar | None | |||
| Nokia 1112 | 96x68 Monochrome | D | Bar | None | ||||
| Nokia 1116 | 96x68 Monochrome | D | Bar | None | ||||
| Nokia 1200 | 96x68 Monochrome | 2007 | D | Nokia UPPCosto, BB4.1 | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 1202 | 96x68 Monochrome | 2009 | D | Infineon, DCT4+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 1203 | 96x68 Monochrome | D | Bar | None | ||||
| Nokia 1207 | 96x68 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2007 | D | Unknown, DCT4+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 1208 | 96x68 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2008 | D | Nokia UPPCosto, BB4.1 (DCT4+) | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 1209 | 96x68 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | Bar | None | ||||
| Nokia 1220 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2002 | D | TDMA/AMPS | Unknown, DCT4 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 1221 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2003 | D | Bar | None | |||
| Nokia 1255 | 96x65 Monochrome | 2005 | D | CDMA | Qualcomm MSM6000 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 1260 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2002 | D | TDMA/AMPS | Unknown, DCT4 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 1261 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2003 | D | Bar | None | |||
| Nokia 1265 | 96x64 Monochrome | 2006 | D | CDMA | Qualcomm QSC6010 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 1280 | 96x68 Monochrome | 2010 | D | GSM | Infineon X-GOLD 110 PMB7900, DCT4+ | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 1282 | 96x68 Monochrome | D | Infineon X-GOLD 110 PMB7900, DCT4+ | Bar | None | |||
| Nokia 1315 | 96x64 12-bit (4096) Color | 2006 | D | CDMA | Qualcomm MSM6000 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 1325 | 96x64 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | Qualcomm QSC6010 | Bar | None | |||
| Nokia 1506 | 96x64 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2009 | D | VIA Telecom CBP5.0 | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 1508 | 96x64 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2008 | D | Bar | None | |||
| Nokia 1508i | 96x64 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | Bar | None | ||||
| Nokia 1600 | 96x68 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2006 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP2M, DCT4 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 1606 | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2008 | D | CDMA | Unknown | Flip | None | |
| Nokia 1610 | Monochrome alphanumeric | 1996 | D | GSM | Hitachi H8, DCT1 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 1610 Plus | Monochrome alphanumeric | 1997 | D | Bar | None | |||
| Nokia 1611 | Monochrome alphanumeric | 1997 | D | Bar | None | |||
| Nokia 1616 | 128x160 (65,536) Color | 2010 | D | Infineon X-GOLD 110 PMB7900, DCT4+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 1618 | 128x160 (65,536) Color | D | Bar | None | ||||
| Nokia 1620 | Monochrome | 1997 | D | Hitachi H8, DCT1 | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 1630 | Monochrome | 1998 | D | Bar | None | |||
| Nokia 1631 | Monochrome | D | Bar | None | ||||
| Nokia 1650 | 128x160 (65,536) Color | 2007 | D | Nokia UPPCosto, BB4.1 (DCT4+) | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 1661 | 128x160 (65,536) Color | 2009 | D | Infineon X-GOLD 110 PMB7900, DCT4+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 1662 | 128x160 (65,536) Color | D | Bar | None | ||||
| Nokia 1680 classic | 128x160 (65,536) Color | 2008 | D | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4+ | Bar | VGA 0.3 MP | ||
| Nokia 1681 classic | 128x160 (65,536) Color | D | Bar | None | ||||
| Nokia 1682 classic | 128x160 (65,536) Color | D | Bar | |||||
| Nokia 1800 | 128x160 (65,536) Color | 2010 | D | Infineon X-GOLD 110 PMB7900, DCT4+ | Bar |
Nokia 2xxx (1994–2010, 2019–2022)
[edit]Previously marketed as the 'Basic' line. Like the 1000 series, the 2000 series are entry-level phones. However, the 2000 series generally contain more advanced features than the 1000 series, with many featuring color screens. Several newer models included camera, Bluetooth, microSD card slot, and even GPS, such as in the case of the Nokia 2710.
| Phone model | Screen type | Released | Status | Technology | Chipset, HW platform | Form factor | Camera | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nokia 2010 | Monochrome | 1994 | D | GSM | Unknown, DCT1 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 2100 | 2003 | D | Nokia MAD2WD1, DCT3 | |||||
| Nokia 2110 | Monochrome alphanumeric 4x13[6] | 1994 | D | Hitachi H8/536, DCT1 | ||||
| Nokia 2110i | 1995 | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2112 | 96x65 Monochrome | 2004 | D | CDMA | Unknown, DCT4 | |||
| Nokia 2115 | 96x65 Monochrome | 2005 | D | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | ||||
| Nokia 2115i | 96x65 Monochrome | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2116 | 96x65 Monochrome | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2116i | 96x65 Monochrome | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2118 | 96x65 Monochrome | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2120 | Monochrome | 1995 | D | TDMA/AMPS | Hitachi H8/536, DCT1 | |||
| Nokia 2120 Plus | Monochrome | 1996 | D | |||||
| Nokia 2125 | 96x65 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2005 | D | CDMA | Unknown, DCT4 | |||
| Nokia 2125i | 96x65 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | CDMA/AMPS | |||||
| Nokia 2126 | 96x65 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | CDMA | |||||
| Nokia 2126i | 96x65 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2128 | 96x65 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2128i | 96x65 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2135 | 96x65 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | D | Qualcomm MSM6125 | ||||
| Nokia 2140 | Monochrome | 1995 | D | GSM | Hitachi H8/536, DCT1 | |||
| Nokia 2146 | Monochrome | 1994 | D | |||||
| Nokia 2148 | Monochrome | 1995 | D | |||||
| Nokia 2148i | Monochrome | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2160 | Monochrome | 1996 | D | TDMA/AMPS | ||||
| Nokia 2160i | Monochrome | 1997 | D | |||||
| Nokia 2168 | Monochrome | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2170 | Monochrome | 1998 | D | CDMA | ||||
| Nokia 2180 | Monochrome | 1997 | D | CDMA/AMPS | ||||
| Nokia 2190 | Monochrome | D | GSM | |||||
| Nokia 2220 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2003 | D | TDMA/AMPS | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Exclusive only to Canadian Market | ||
| Nokia 2220 slide | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2010 | D | GSM | Slide | VGA 0.3 MP | ||
| Nokia 2228 | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2009 | D | CDMA | Qualcomm QSC6080 | Bar | 1.3 MP | |
| Nokia 2255 | 128x128 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2005 | D | Unknown | Flip | None | ||
| Nokia 2260 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2003 | D | TDMA/AMPS | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Bar | Exclusive only to American Market | |
| Nokia 2270 | 96x65 Monochrome | D | CDMA | |||||
| Nokia 2272 | 96x65 Monochrome | 2006 | D | CDMA/GSM | ||||
| Nokia 2275 | 96x65 Monochrome | 2003 | D | CDMA | ||||
| Nokia 2280 | 96x65 Monochrome | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2285 | 96x65 Monochrome | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2300 | 96x65 Monochrome | D | GSM | |||||
| Nokia 2310 | 96x68 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2006 | D | Nokia UPP2M, DCT4+ | ||||
| Nokia 2320 classic | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2009 | D | |||||
| Nokia 2322 classic | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2323 classic | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2330 classic | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | VGA 0.3 MP | |||||
| Nokia 2365 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2006 | D | CDMA | Unknown | Flip | None | |
| Nokia 2365i | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2366 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2366i | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2505 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2007 | D | Qualcomm QSC6010 | ||||
| Nokia 2600 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | 2004 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Bar | ||
| Nokia 2600 classic | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2008 | D | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4+ | VGA 0.3 MP | |||
| Nokia 2605 Mirage | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color | D | CDMA | Unknown | Flip | |||
| Nokia 2608 | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2009 | D | Qualcomm QSC6020 | None | |||
| Nokia 2610 | 128x128 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2006 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP4M, DCT4+ | Bar | ||
| Nokia 2626 | 128x128 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2630 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2007 | D | VGA 0.3 MP | ||||
| Nokia 2650 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | 2004 | D | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Flip | None | ||
| Nokia 2651 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2652 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | 2005 | D | |||||
| Nokia 2660 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2007 | D | EGSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4+ | |||
| Nokia 2660 Flip | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2022 | P | GSM/HSPA/LTE | Unisoc T107 | 0.3 MP | ||
| Nokia 2680 slide | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2008 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4+ | Slide | VGA 0.3 MP | |
| Nokia 2690 | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2010 | D | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | Bar | |||
| Nokia 2692 | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2700 classic | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2009 | D | GSM, EDGE | 2.0 MP | |||
| Nokia 2705 Shade | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color | D | CDMA | Qualcomm QSC6055 | Flip | 1.3 MP | ||
| Nokia 2710 Navigation Edition | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | D | GSM, EDGE | Broadcom BCM21351, BB5.0 | Bar | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 2720 fold | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, BB5.0 | Flip | 1.3 MP | ||
| Nokia 2720 Flip | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2019 | D | GSM, HSPA, LTE | Qualcomm MSM8905 Snapdragon 205 | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 2730 classic | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2009 | D | GSM, EDGE, UMTS | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | Bar | ||
| Nokia 2760 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2007 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4+ | Flip | VGA 0.3 MP | |
| Nokia 2760 Flip | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2022 | P | GSM, HSPA, LTE | Unknown | 5.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 2780 Flip | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | P | Qualcomm QM215 Snapdragon 215 | |||||
| Nokia 2855 | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2006 | D | CDMA/AMPS | Unknown | None | ||
| Nokia 2855i | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2865 | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color | D | CDMA | Nokia TIKU, DCT4.5 | Bar | |||
| Nokia 2865i | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color | D | ||||||
| Nokia 2875 | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color | D | 1.3 MP |
Nokia 3xxx (1997–2009, 2017–present)
[edit]The Nokia 3000 series was originally referred to as the 'Expression' line. They were originally mostly mid-range phones targeted towards the youth market. Many of these models included visually attractive designs to appeal to the younger demographic, unlike the 6000-series which were more conservatively styled to appeal to business users, and the 7000-series which targeted the fashion-conscious.
| Phone model | Screen type | Released | Status | Technology | Chipset, HW platform | Form factor | Camera | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nokia 3100 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | 2003 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 3105 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | D | CDMA | |||||
| Nokia 3108 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | D | GSM | |||||
| Nokia 3109 classic | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) | 2007 | D | GSM/EDGE/HSCSD | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | |||
| Nokia 3110 | 83x41 + icons Monochrome | 1997 | D | GSM | Unknown, DCT2 | |||
| Nokia 3110 classic | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) | 2007 | D | GSM/EDGE/HSCSD | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | 1.3 MP | ||
| Nokia 3110 Evolve | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) | 2008 | D | |||||
| Nokia 3120 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | 2004 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | None | ||
| Nokia 3120 classic | 240x320 (16M) Color | 2008 | D | WCDMA/GSM | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 3125 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | 2004 | D | CDMA | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | None | ||
| Nokia 3128 | 128x160 18-bit (65,536) Color 96x64 16-bit (4,096) Color (external) |
2004 | D | GSM | Unknown, DCT4 | Flip | Exclusive only to Chinese Market | |
| Nokia 3129 | 128x160 18-bit (65,536) Color 96x64 16-bit (4,096) Color (external) |
2004 | D | |||||
| Nokia 3152 | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color 96x65 Monochrome (external) |
2005 | D | CDMA | Nokia TIKUEDGE, DCT4.5 | |||
| Nokia 3155 | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color 96x65 Monochrome (external) |
2005 | D | |||||
| Nokia 3200 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | 2003 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Bar | 0.1 MP | |
| Nokia 3205 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | 2004 | D | CDMA/AMPS | 0.3 MP | |||
| Nokia 3208 classic | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2009 | D | GSM | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 3210 | 84x48 Monochrome | 1999 | D | GSM | Texas Instruments MAD2PR1, DCT3 | None | ||
| Nokia 3210 (2024) | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2024 | P | LTE/HSPA/GSM | Unisoc T107 | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 3220 | 128x128 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2004 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | VGA 0.3 MP | ||
| Nokia 3230 | 176x208 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2005 | D | Nokia UPP_WD2, DCT4 | 1.3 MP | |||
| Nokia 3250 | 176x208 18-bit (262,144) Color | D | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | Bar/Twist | 2.0 MP | |||
| Nokia 3250 XpressMusic | 176x208 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2006 | D | |||||
| Nokia 3280 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2001 | D | CDMA/AMPS | Unknown, DCT3 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 3285 | 84x48 Monochrome | D | Bar | |||||
| Nokia 3300 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | 2003 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Bar | ||
| Nokia 3310 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2000 | D | Texas Instruments MAD2WD1, DCT3 | Bar | |||
| Nokia 3310 (2017) | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2017 | D | MediaTek MT6260CA | Bar | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 3310 3G | D | GSM/HSPA | Spreadtrum SC7701B | Bar | ||||
| Nokia 3310 4G | D | GSM/HSPA/LTE | Spreadtrum SC9820 | Bar | ||||
| Nokia 3315 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2002 | D | GSM | Texas Instruments MAD2WD1, DCT3 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 3320 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2001 | D | TDMA/AMPS | Bar | |||
| Nokia 3330 | 84x48 Monochrome | D | GSM | Bar | ||||
| Nokia 3350 | 96x65 Monochrome | D | Bar | |||||
| Nokia 3360 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2002 | D | TDMA/AMPS | Bar | |||
| Nokia 3390 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2001 | D | GSM | Bar | |||
| Nokia 3395 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2002 | D | Bar | ||||
| Nokia 3410 | 96x65 Monochrome | D | Bar | |||||
| Nokia 3500 classic | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2007 | D | GSM/EDGE | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | Bar | 2.0 MP | |
| Nokia 3510 | 96x65 Monochrome | 2002 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 3510i | 96x65 12-bit (4096) Color | D | GSM | Bar | ||||
| Nokia 3520 | 96x65 12-bit (4096) Color | 2004 | D | TDMA/AMPS | Bar | |||
| Nokia 3530 | 96x65 12-bit (4096) Color | 2003 | D | GSM | Bar | |||
| Nokia 3555 | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2008 | D | GSM/WCDMA EGPRS HSCSD | Unknown | Flip | VGA 0.3 MP | |
| Nokia 3560 | 96x65 12-bit (4096) Color | 2003 | D | TDMA/AMPS | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 3570 | 96x65 Monochrome | D | CDMA | |||||
| Nokia 3585 | 96x65 Monochrome | 2002 | D | CDMA/AMPS | ||||
| Nokia 3585i | 96x65 Monochrome | 2003 | D | |||||
| Nokia 3586 | 96x65 12-bit (4096) Color | D | ||||||
| Nokia 3586i | 96x65 12-bit (4096) Color | D | ||||||
| Nokia 3587 | 96x65 12-bit (4096) Color | D | ||||||
| Nokia 3587i | 96x65 12-bit (4096) Color | D | ||||||
| Nokia 3588i | 96x65 12-bit (4096) Color | D | ||||||
| Nokia 3589i | 96x65 12-bit (4096) Color | D | ||||||
| Nokia 3590 | 96x65 Monochrome | D | GSM | |||||
| Nokia 3595 | 96x65 12-bit (4096) Color | D | ||||||
| Nokia 3600 | 176x208 12-bit (4096) Color | D | Nokia UPP_WD2, DCT4 | Bar/Circular keypad | VGA 0.3 MP | |||
| Nokia 3600 slide | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2008 | D | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | Slide | 3.2 MP | ||
| Nokia 3602 slide | 240x320 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2008 | D | GSM/HSPA | ||||
| Nokia 3606 | 176x220 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2008 | D | CDMA | Unknown | Flip | 1.3 MP | |
| Nokia 3608 | 176x220 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2008 | D | Unknown | ||||
| Nokia 3610 | 96x65 Monochrome | 2002 | D | GSM | Texas Instruments MAD2WD1, DCT3 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 3610 Fold | 176x220 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2008 | D | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | Flip | 1.3 MP | ||
| Nokia 3620 | 176x208 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2003 | D | Nokia UPP_WD2, DCT4 | Bar | VGA 0.3 MP | ||
| Nokia 3650 | 176x208 12-bit (4096) Color | D | Bar/Circular keypad | |||||
| Nokia 3660 | 176x208 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | Bar | |||||
| Nokia 3710 fold | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | D | GSM/UMTS | Unknown, BB5.0 | Flip | 3.2 MP | |
| Nokia 3711 | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | D | GSM/HSPA | ||||
| Nokia 3720 classic | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | D | GSM, EDGE | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | Bar | VGA + 2.0 MP | |
| Nokia 3806 | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2010 | D | CDMA | Qualcomm QSC1110 | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 3810 | Monochrome | 1997 | D | GSM | Unknown, DCT3 | None |
Nokia 5xxx (1998–2010, 2020–present)
[edit]The Nokia 5000 series, previously referred to as the 'Active' line, was similar in features to the 3000 series, but often contained more features geared toward active individuals. Many of the 5000 series phones feature a rugged construction or contain extra features for music playback. The Nokia XpressMusic lineup forms a majority of the 5000 series from 2006 to 2010, before being superseded by the Nokia Xseries.
| Phone model | Screen type | Released | Status | Technology | Chipset, HW platform | Form factor | Camera |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nokia 5000 | 240x320 (65,000) Color | 2008 | D | GSM, EDGE | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4+ | Bar | 1.3 MP |
| Nokia 5030 XpressRadio | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2009 | GSM | Unknown, DCT4+ | None | ||
| Nokia 5070 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2007 | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4+ | VGA 0.3 MP | |||
| Nokia 5100 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | 2003 | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | None | |||
| Nokia 5110 | 84x48 Monochrome | 1998 | Texas Instruments MAD2, DCT3 | ||||
| Nokia 5110i | 84x48 Monochrome | ||||||
| Nokia 5120 | 84x48 Monochrome | TDMA/AMPS | |||||
| Nokia 5125 | 84x48 Monochrome | ||||||
| Nokia 5130 | 84x48 Monochrome | GSM | |||||
| Nokia 5130 XpressMusic | 240x320 (256,000) Color | 2009 | GSM, EDGE | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 5140 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | 2004 | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | None | ||
| Nokia 5140i | 128x128 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2005 | VGA 0.3 MP | ||||
| Nokia 5146 | 84x48 Monochrome | 1998 | Texas Instruments MAD2, DCT3 | None | |||
| Nokia 5160 | 84x48 Monochrome | TDMA/AMPS | |||||
| Nokia 5160i | 84x48 Monochrome | ||||||
| Nokia 5165 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2000 | |||||
| Nokia 5170 | 84x48 Monochrome | 1999 | CDMA | ||||
| Nokia 5170i | 84x48 Monochrome | ||||||
| Nokia 5180 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2000 | CDMA/AMPS | ||||
| Nokia 5180i | 84x48 Monochrome | ||||||
| Nokia 5185 | 84x48 Monochrome | ||||||
| Nokia 5185i | 84x48 Monochrome | ||||||
| Nokia 5190 | 84x48 Monochrome | 1998 | GSM | ||||
| Nokia 5200 | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2006 | GSM, EDGE | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | Slide | VGA 0.3 MP | |
| Nokia 5208 | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2008 | GSM | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | |||
| Nokia 5210 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2002 | Texas Instruments MAD2WD1, DCT3 | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 5220 XpressMusic | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2008 | GSM, EDGE | Unknown, BB5.0 | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 5228 | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | GSM | Nokia RAPIDO, BB5.0 | ||||
| Nokia 5230 | 360x640 IU 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | UMTS / GSM / EDGE / HSDPA / HSUPA / WLAN | ||||
| Nokia 5230 Nuron | 360x640 IU 24-bit (16M) Color | ||||||
| Nokia 5232 | 360x640 24-bit (16M) Color | GSM / EDGE / WLAN | |||||
| Nokia 5233 | 360x640 24-bit (16M) Color | 2010 | |||||
| Nokia 5235 Comes With Music | 360x640 24-bit (16M) Color | GSM / EDGE / HSDPA / WLAN | |||||
| Nokia 5236 | 360x640 24-bit (16M) Color | GSM / EDGE / WLAN | |||||
| Nokia 5238 | 360x640 24-bit (16M) Color | ||||||
| Nokia 5250 | 360x640 24-bit (16M) Color | GSM / EDGE | |||||
| Nokia 5300 | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2006 | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | Slide | 1.3 MP | ||
| Nokia 5310 XpressMusic | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | Bar | 2.0 MP | |||
| Nokia 5310 (2020) | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2020 | Mediatek MT6260A | ||||
| Nokia 5310 (2024) | 240x320 Color | 2024 | P | Unisoc 6531F | |||
| Nokia 5320 XpressMusic | 240x320 (16M) Color | 2008 | D | GSM / GPRS / EDGE / UMTS / HSPA | Nokia RAPIDO, BB5.0 | 2.0 MP + CIF Video Call Camera | |
| Nokia 5330 Mobile TV Edition | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | GSM / GPRS / UMTS / DVB-H | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | Slide | 3.2 MP | |
| Nokia 5330 XpressMusic | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | GSM / UMTS | |||||
| Nokia 5500 Sport | 208x208 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2006 | GSM | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | Bar | 2.0 MP | |
| Nokia 5500 Sport Music Edition | 208x208 18-bit (262,144) Color | ||||||
| Nokia 5510 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2001 | Texas Instruments MAD2WD1, DCT3 | None | |||
| Nokia 5530 XpressMusic | 360x640 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | GSM/EDGE/WLAN | Unknown, BB5.0 | 3.2 MP + VGA Video Call Camera | ||
| Nokia 5610 XpressMusic | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | GSM/EDGE/UMTS | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | Slide | 3.2 MP + CIF Video Call Camera | |
| Nokia 5630 XpressMusic | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | Nokia RAPUYAMA, BB5.0 | Bar | 3.2 MP + VGA Video Call Camera | ||
| Nokia 5700 XpressMusic | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | Nokia RAPIDO, BB5.0 | Bar/Twist | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 5710 XpressAudio | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2022 | P | GSM, GPRS, (E)GPRS, HSDPA, HSUPA HSPA+, LTE | Unisoc T107 | Bar | 0.3 MP |
| Nokia 5730 XpressMusic | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | D | GSM / GPRS / (E)GPRS / UMTS / HSDPA / HSUPA / WLAN | Nokia RAPIDOYAWE, BB5.0 | Bar w/ Slide-out QWERTY keyboard | 3.2 MP + VGA Video Call Camera |
| Nokia 5800 Navigation Edition | 360x640 24-bit (16M) Color | 2008 | UMTS/GSM/EDGE/HSDPA | Nokia RAPIDO, BB5.0 | Bar | 3.2 MP, AF + VGA Video Call Camera | |
| Nokia 5800 XpressMusic | 360x640 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 |
Nokia 6xxx (1995–2010, 2020–2024)
[edit]The Nokia 6000 series is Nokia's largest family of phones. Originally they were the 'Classic Business' range,[7] notable for their conservative, unisex designs, which made them popular among business users. Some of these are smartphones running Symbian. After 2007, it consists mostly of mid-rangers with broad appeal, using the 'classic' (candybar), 'slide' (slider) and 'fold' (clamshell) names with a balance between price, functionality and style.[8]
| Phone model | Screen type | Released | Status | Technology | Chipset, HW platform | Form factor | Camera |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nokia 6010 | 96x65 12-bit (4096) Color | 2004 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Bar | None |
| Nokia 6011i | 96x65 12-bit (4096) Color | D | CDMA | Unknown | |||
| Nokia 6012 | 96x65 12-bit (4096) Color | D | CDMA/AMPS | Unknown, DCT4 | |||
| Nokia 6015 | 96x65 12-bit (4096) Color | D | |||||
| Nokia 6015i | 96x65 12-bit (4096) Color | D | |||||
| Nokia 6016i | 96x65 12-bit (4096) Color | D | |||||
| Nokia 6019i | 96x65 12-bit (4096) Color | D | |||||
| Nokia 6020 | 128x128 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2005 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | 0.3 MP | |
| Nokia 6021 | 128x128 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | None | ||||
| Nokia 6030 | 128x128 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | Nokia UPP4M, DCT4 | ||||
| Nokia 6060 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | Flip | ||||
| Nokia 6060i | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | |||||
| Nokia 6061 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | |||||
| Nokia 6061i | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | |||||
| Nokia 6062 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | Unknown, DCT4 | ||||
| Nokia 6066 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2007 | D | CDMA | Unknown | 0.3 MP | |
| Nokia 6070 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2006 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4+ | Bar | |
| Nokia 6080 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | ||||
| Nokia 6080 (car phone) | 84x48 Monochrome | 1995 | D | Unknown, DCT2 | None | ||
| Nokia 6081 (car phone) | 1997 | D | |||||
| Nokia 6085 | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2006 | D | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | Flip | 0.3 MP | |
| Nokia 6086 | 2007 | D | GSM/UMA (VoIP) | Nokia RAPGSM, DCT4 | |||
| Nokia 6088 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | CDMA | Unknown | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 6090 (car phone) | 84x48 Monochrome | 1999 | D | GSM | Unknown, DCT3 | ||
| Nokia 6091 (car phone) | 84x48 Monochrome | D | |||||
| Nokia 6100 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | 2002 | D | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | |||
| Nokia 6101 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2004 | D | Flip | 0.3 MP | ||
| Nokia 6102 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2005 | D | ||||
| Nokia 6102i | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2006 | D | ||||
| Nokia 6103 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | |||||
| Nokia 6108 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | 2003 | D | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 6110 | 84x48 Monochrome | 1997 | D | Texas Instruments MAD2, DCT3 | |||
| Nokia 6110 Navigator | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | D | HSDPA/GSM/EDGE | Nokia RAPIDO, BB5.0 | Slide | 2.0 MP w/flash |
| Nokia 6111 | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2005 | D | GSM | Nokia TIKUEDGE, DCT4.5 | 1.0 MP | |
| Nokia 6120 | 84x48 Monochrome | 1998 | D | TDMA/AMPS | Texas Instruments MAD2, DCT3 | Bar | None |
| Nokia 6120 Classic | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | D | HSDPA/GSM/EDGE | Nokia RAPIDOYAWE, BB5.0 | 2.0 MP | |
| Nokia 6121 Classic | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | D | |||||
| Nokia 6122 Classic | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2008 | D | GSM/EDGE | |||
| Nokia 6124 Classic | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | D | HSDPA/GSM/EDGE | ||||
| Nokia 6125 | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2006 | D | GSM | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | Flip | 1.3 MP |
| Nokia 6126 | 128x160 24-bit (16M) Color | D | |||||
| Nokia 6130 | 84x48 Monochrome | 1997 | D | Texas Instruments MAD2, DCT3 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 6131 | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2006 | D | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | Flip | 1.3 MP | |
| Nokia 6133 | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | D | |||||
| Nokia 6135 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2005 | D | CDMA | Unknown, BB5.0 | 0.3 MP | |
| Nokia 6136 | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2006 | D | GSM/UMA (VoIP) | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | 1.3 MP | |
| Nokia 6138 | 84x48 Monochrome | 1997 | D | GSM | Texas Instruments MAD2, DCT3 | Bar | None |
| Nokia 6150 | 1998 | ||||||
| Nokia 6151 | 128x160 (262,144) Color | 2006 | GSM/WCDMA | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | 1.3 MP | ||
| Nokia 6152 | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color 96x65 16-bit (65,536) Color (external) |
2006 | D | CDMA/AMPS | Unknown, DCT4 | Flip | None |
| Nokia 6155 | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color 96x65 16-bit (65,536) Color (external) |
2005 | D | ||||
| Nokia 6155i | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color 96x65 16-bit (65,536) Color (external) |
D | |||||
| Nokia 6160 | 84x48 Monochrome | 1998 | D | TDMA/AMPS | Texas Instruments MAD2, DCT3 | Bar | |
| Nokia 6160i | 84x48 Monochrome | D | |||||
| Nokia 6161 | 84x48 Monochrome | D | Bar (flip cover) | ||||
| Nokia 6161i | 84x48 Monochrome | D | |||||
| Nokia 6162 | 84x48 Monochrome | D | |||||
| Nokia 6162i | 84x48 Monochrome | D | |||||
| Nokia 6165i | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color 96x65 16-bit (65,536) Color (external) |
2005 | D | CDMA/AMPS | Unknown | Flip | |
| Nokia 6170 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2004 | D | GSM | Nokia TIKUEDGE, DCT4.5 | Flip | |
| Nokia 6175i | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2004 | D | CDMA/AMPS | Unknown | Flip | 1.3 MP |
| Nokia 6185 | Monochrome | 1999 | D | Texas Instruments MAD2, DCT3 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 6185i | Monochrome | D | |||||
| Nokia 6188 | Monochrome | D | |||||
| Nokia 6190 | 84x48 Monochrome | 1997 | D | GSM | |||
| Nokia 6200 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | 2003 | D | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | |||
| Nokia 6205 | 128x128 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2008 | D | CDMA | Unknown | Flip | 1.2 MP |
| Nokia 6206 | 128x128 18-bit (262,144) Color | D | |||||
| Nokia 6208 classic | 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | C | GSM | Unknown, BB5.0 | Bar | 3.2 MP |
| Nokia 6210 | 96x60 Monochrome | 2000 | D | Texas Instruments MAD2WD1, DCT3 | None | ||
| Nokia 6210 Navigator | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2008 | D | GSM / GPRS / (E)GPRS / UMTS / HSDPA / HSUPA / GPS / A-GPS | Unknown, BB5.0 | Slide | 3.2 MP |
| Nokia 6212 classic | 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | D | GSM/UMTS | Bar | 2.0 MP | |
| Nokia 6215i | 128x128 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2006 | D | CDMA | Unknown | Flip | None |
| Nokia 6216 classic | 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | C | GSM/UMTS | Unknown, BB5.0 | Bar | 2.0 MP |
| Nokia 6220 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | 2003 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Bar | Yes |
| Nokia 6220 classic | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color 2.2" | 2008 | D | GSM / GPRS / UMTS / HSDPA / HSUPA | Unknown, BB5.0 | Bar | 5.0 MP, Carl Zeiss lens, Xenon Flash |
| Nokia 6223 | 320x240 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2005 | D | GSM / GPRS / (E)GPRS / UMTS | Unknown | Bar | 2.0 MP |
| Nokia 6225 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | 2004 | D | CDMA/AMPS | Unknown, DCT4 | Bar | 0.3 MP |
| Nokia 6230 | 128x128 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | GSM | Nokia TIKUEDGE, DCT4.5 | Bar | ||
| Nokia 6230i | 208x208 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2005 | D | Bar | 1.3 MP | ||
| Nokia 6233 | 320x240 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2006 | D | UMTS/GSM | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | Bar | 2.0 MP |
| Nokia 6234 | 320x240 18-bit (262,144) Color | D | Bar | ||||
| Nokia 6235 | 128x128 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2005 | D | CDMA | Nokia TIKUEDGE, DCT4.5 | Bar | 0.3 MP |
| Nokia 6235i | 128x128 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | CDMA/AMPS | Bar | |||
| Nokia 6236i | 128x128 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | Bar | ||||
| Nokia 6250 | 96x65 Monochrome | 2000 | D | GSM | Texas Instruments MAD2WD1, DCT3 | Bar | None |
| Nokia 6255 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2004 | D | CDMA/AMPS | Nokia TIKUEDGE, DCT4.5 | Flip | 0.3 MP |
| Nokia 6255i | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | |||||
| Nokia 6256i | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | |||||
| Nokia 6260 | 176x208 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | GSM | Nokia UPP_WD2, DCT4 | |||
| Nokia 6260 Slide | 320x480 24-bit (16M) Color | 2008 | D | GSM/WCDMA/HSDPA/HSUPA/VoIP | Unknown, BB5.0 | Slide | 5.0 MP |
| Nokia 6263 | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | D | GSM/WCDMA EGPRS HSCSD | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | Flip | 1.0 MP | |
| Nokia 6265 | 320x240 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2005 | D | CDMA | Unknown | Slide | 2.0 MP |
| Nokia 6267 | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | D | UMTS/GSM | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | Flip | |
| Nokia 6268 | 320x240 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2005 | D | CDMA | Unknown | Slide | |
| Nokia 6270 | 320x240 18-bit (262,144) Color | D | GSM | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | |||
| Nokia 6275 | 320x240 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2006 | D | CDMA | Unknown | Bar | |
| Nokia 6275i | 320x240 18-bit (262,144) Color | D | CDMA | Unknown | |||
| Nokia 6280 | 320x240 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2005 | D | UMTS/GSM | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | Slide | |
| Nokia 6282 | 320x240 18-bit (262,144) Color | D | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | ||||
| Nokia 6288 | 320x240 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2006 | D | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | |||
| Nokia 6290 | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color 128x160 16-bit (262,144) Color (external) |
D | Nokia RAPIDO, BB5.0 | Flip | |||
| Nokia 6300 | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | D | GSM | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | Bar | ||
| Nokia 6300i | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2008 | D | GSM and VoIP | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | Bar | |
| Nokia 6300 4G | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2020 | D | LTE/HSPA/GSM | Qualcomm QC8909 Snapdragon 210 | Bar | VGA |
| Nokia 6301 | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | D | GSM/UMA/WLAN (through mobile data) | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | Bar | 2.0 MP |
| Nokia 6303 classic | 320x240 32-bit (16M) colour | 2009 | D | GSM | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | Bar | 3.2 MP |
| Nokia 6303i classic | 320x240 32-bit (16M) colour | 2010 | D | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | Bar | ||
| Nokia 6305i | 320x240 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2006 | D | CDMA | Unknown | Slide | 2.0 MP |
| Nokia 6310 | 96x65 Monochrome | 2001 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Bar | None |
| Nokia 6310i | 96x65 Monochrome | 2002 | D | ||||
| Nokia 6310 (2021) | 320x240 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2021 | P | Unisoc 6531F | Bar | VGA | |
| Nokia 6310 (2024) | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2024 | Bar | ||||
| Nokia 6315i | 128x160 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2006 | D | CDMA | Qualcomm MSM6500 | Flip | None |
| Nokia 6316 Slide | 320x240 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2010 | D | Qualcomm QSC6085 | Slide | 2.0 MP | |
| Nokia 6340 | 96x65 Monochrome | 2003 | D | GSM/TDMA | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Bar | None |
| Nokia 6340i | 96x65 Monochrome | 2002 | D | ||||
| Nokia 6350 | 240x320 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2009 | D | HSDPA | Unknown | Flip | 2.0 MP |
| Nokia 6360 | 96x65 Monochrome | 2001 | D | TDMA | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Bar | None |
| Nokia 6370 | 96x65 Monochrome | 2002 | D | CDMA | |||
| Nokia 6385 | 96x65 Monochrome | D | CDMA/AMPS | ||||
| Nokia 6500 | 96x65 Monochrome | D | GSM | Bar (slide cover) | |||
| Nokia 6500 classic | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | D | GSM/UMTS | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | Bar | 2.0 MP |
| Nokia 6500 slide | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | D | Slide | 3.2 MP | |||
| Nokia 6510 | 96x65 Monochrome | 2002 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Bar | None |
| Nokia 6555 | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | D | GSM/UMTS | Unknown, BB5.0 | Flip | 1.3 MP |
| Nokia 6560 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | 2003 | D | TDMA/AMPS | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Bar | None |
| Nokia 6585 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | D | CDMA/AMPS | ||||
| Nokia 6590 | 96x65 Monochrome | 2002 | D | GSM | |||
| Nokia 6590i | 96x65 Monochrome | 2003 | D | ||||
| Nokia 6600 | 176x208 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | Nokia UPP_WD2, DCT4 | 0.3 MP | |||
| Nokia 6600 fold | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2008 | D | UMTS/GSM | Unknown, BB5.0 | Flip | 2.0 MP |
| Nokia 6600 slide | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | D | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | Slide | 3.2 MP | ||
| Nokia 6600i slide | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | D | 5.0 MP | |||
| Nokia 6610 | 128x128 12-bit (4,096) Color | 2002 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Bar | None |
| Nokia 6610i | 128x128 12-bit (4,096) Color | 2004 | D | Bar, CIF | 0.1 MP | ||
| Nokia 6620 | 176x208 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2005 | D | Bar | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 6630 | 176x208 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2004 | D | UMTS/GSM | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | 1.3 MP | |
| Nokia 6638 | 176x208 16-bit (65,536) Color | C | CDMA/GSM | 1.2 MP | |||
| Nokia 6650 | 128x160 12-bit (4096) Color | 2003 | D | UMTS/GSM | Nokia TIKU, DCT4.5 | None | |
| Nokia 6650 fold | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2008 | D | HSDPA/GSM | Freescale MXC300-30, BB5.0 | Flip | 2.0 MP |
| Nokia 6651 | 128x160 12-bit (4096) Color | 2004 | D | UMTS/GSM | Nokia TIKU, DCT4.5 | Bar | None |
| Nokia 6670 | 176x208 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | GSM | Nokia UPP_WD2, DCT4 | 1.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 6680 | 176x208 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2005 | D | UMTS/GSM | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | 1.3 MP + VGA | |
| Nokia 6681 | 176x208 18-bit (262,144) Color | D | GSM | 1.3 MP | |||
| Nokia 6682 | 176x208 18-bit (262,144) Color | D | |||||
| Nokia 6700 classic | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | D | HSDPA/GSM | Nokia RAPUYAMA, BB5.0 | 5.0 MP | |
| Nokia 6700 slide | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2010 | D | Slide | |||
| Nokia 6708 | 208x320 16-bit (65K) Color | 2005 | D | GPRS/GSM | Unknown, BB5.0 | Bar | 1.3 MP |
| Nokia 6710 Navigator | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | D | HSDPA/GSM/EDGE | Nokia RAPUYAMA, BB5.0 | Slide | 5.0 MP |
| Nokia 6720 classic | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | D | HSDPA/GSM | Bar | |||
| Nokia 6730 classic | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | D | GSM/EDGE/UMTS | Unknown, BB5.0 | Bar | 3.2 MP | |
| Nokia 6750 Mural | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | D | GSM/EDGE/UMTS/HSCSD/HSDPA | Flip | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 6760 Slide | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | D | HSDPA/GSM | Nokia RAPIDO, BB5.0 | Slide | 3.2 MP | |
| Nokia 6788 | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | D | GSM | Unknown, BB5.0 | 5.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 6788i | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | D | |||||
| Nokia 6790 Surge | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | D | HSDPA/GSM | Nokia RAPIDO, BB5.0 | 3.2 MP | ||
| Nokia 6800 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | 2003 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Bar (flip keyboard) | None |
| Nokia 6810 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | 2004 | D | ||||
| Nokia 6820 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | D | |||||
| Nokia 6822 | 128x128 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2005 | D |
Nokia 6136 UMA is the first mobile phone to include Unlicensed Mobile Access. Nokia 6131 NFC is the first mobile phone to include Near Field Communication.
Nokia 7xxx – Fashion and Experimental series (1999–2010)
[edit]The Nokia 7000 series is a family of Nokia phones with two uses. Most phones in the 7000 series are targeted towards fashion-conscious users, often with feminine styling to appeal to women. Some phones in this family also test features. The 7000 series are considered to be a more consumer-oriented family of phones when contrasted to the business-oriented 6000 series. The family is also distinguished from the 3000-series phones as being more mature and female-oriented, while the 3000-series was largely targeted towards the youth market.
| Phone model | Screen type | Released | Status | Technology | Chipset, HW platform | Form factor | Camera |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nokia 7020 | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2009 | D | GSM | Unknown, BB5.0 | Flip | 2.0 MP |
| Nokia 7070 Prism | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2008 | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4+ | None | |||
| Nokia 7088 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2007 | CDMA | Unknown | Slide | None | |
| Nokia 7100 Supernova | 240x320 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2008 | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4+ | 1.3 MP | ||
| Nokia 7110 | 96x65 Monochrome | 1999 | Nokia MAD2PR1, DCT3 | Bar (slide cover) | None | ||
| Nokia 7160 | 96x65 Monochrome | 2000 | TDMA/AMPS | None | |||
| Nokia 7190 | 96x65 Monochrome | GSM | None | ||||
| Nokia 7200 | 128x128 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2004 | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Flip | 0.3 MP | ||
| Nokia 7205 Intrigue | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2009 | CDMA | Unknown | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 7208 | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2009 | 2.0 MP | ||||
| Nokia 7210 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | 2002 | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 7210 Supernova | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2008 | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | 2.0 MP | |||
| Nokia 7230 | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2010 | GSM, UMTS | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | Slide | 3.2 MP | |
| Nokia 7250 | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | 2003 | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Bar | 0.1 MP | |
| Nokia 7250i | 128x128 12-bit (4096) Color | ||||||
| Nokia 7260 | 128x128 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2004 | 0.3 MP | ||||
| Nokia 7270 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | Nokia TIKUEDGE, DCT4 | Flip | ||||
| Nokia 7280 | 104x208 16-bit (65,536) Color | Lipstick / Slide | |||||
| Nokia 7310 Supernova | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2008 | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | Bar | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 7360 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2006 | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | 0.3 MP | |||
| Nokia 7370 | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | Swivel | 1.3 MP | |||
| Nokia 7373 | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2.0 MP | |||||
| Nokia 7376 | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | C | GSM/UMTS | Nokia RAPGSM(?), BB5.0 | Flip | 3.2 MP | |
| Nokia 7380 | 104x208 16-bit (65,536) Color | D | GSM | Unknown, DCT4 | Lipstick | 2.0 MP | |
| Nokia 7390 | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | GSM/UMTS | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | Flip | 3.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 7500 Prism | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | GSM | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | Bar | 2.0 MP | |
| Nokia 7510 Supernova | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | GSM/UMA | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | Flip | ||
| Nokia 7600 | 128x160 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2003 | GSM/UMTS | Nokia TIKU, DCT4.5 | Square Bar | 0.3 MP | |
| Nokia 7610 | 176x208 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2004 | GSM | Nokia UPP_WD2, DCT4 | Bar | 1.0 MP | |
| Nokia 7610 Supernova | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2008 | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | Slide | 3.2 MP | ||
| Nokia 7650 | 176x208 12-bit (4096) Color | 2002 | Nokia UPP_WD2, DCT4 | 0.3 MP | |||
| Nokia 7700 | 640x320 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2004 | C | Texas Instruments OMAP 1510 | Bar | ||
| Nokia 7705 Twist | 320x240 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2009 | D | CDMA | Qualcomm QSC6075 | Swivel | 3.0 MP |
| Nokia 7710 | 640x320 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2005 | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Bar | 1.0 MP | |
| Nokia 7900 Prism | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | GSM, GPRS, EDGE, UMTS | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 7900 Crystal Prism | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2008 |
The 7110 was the first Nokia phone with a WAP browser. WAP was significantly hyped up during the 1998–2000 Internet boom. However WAP did not meet these expectations and uptake was limited. Another industry first was the flap, which slid from beneath the phone with a push from the release button. Unfortunately the cover was not too durable. The 7110 was also the only phone to feature a navi-roller key.
The 7250i was a slightly improved version of the Nokia 7250. It includes XHTML and OMA Forward lock digital rights management. The phone has exactly the same design as the 7250. This phone is far more popular than the 7250 and has been made available on pre-paid packages and therefore it is very popular amongst youths in the UK and other European countries.
The 7510 Supernova was a phone exclusive to T-Mobile USA. Only some units of this model have Wi-Fi chips with UMA. The Wi-Fi adapter on this phone supports up to WPA2 encryption if present. This phone uses Xpress-On Covers.
The 7650 was the first Series 60 smartphone of Nokia. It was quite basic compared to smartphones, it didn't have MMC slot, but it had a camera.
The 7610 was Nokia's first smartphone featuring a megapixel camera (1,152x864 pixels), and is targeted towards the fashion conscious individual. End-users can also use the 7610 with Nokia Lifeblog. Other pre-installed applications include the Opera and Kodak Photo Sharing. It is notable for its looks, having opposite corners rounded off. It comes with a 64 MB Reduced Size MMC. The main CPU is an ARM compatible chip (ARM4T architecture) running at 123 MHz.
The 7710's 640x320 screen was a touch screen phone.
Nokia 8xxx (1996–2007, 2018–present)
[edit]The Nokia 8000 series was originally referred to as the company's 'Premium' range of handsets including luxury phones.[9] This series is characterized by ergonomics and attractiveness. The internals of the phone are similar to those in different series and so on that level offer nothing particularly different, however the physical handset itself offers a level of functionality which appeals to users who focus on ergonomics. The front slide keypad covers offered a pseudo-flip that at the time Nokia were unwilling to make. Materials used increased the cost and hence exclusivity of these handsets.
The only exception to the rule (there are many in different series) is the 82xx and 83xx which were very small and light handsets.
| Phone model | Screen type | Released | Status | Technology | Chipset, HW platform | Form factor | Camera | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nokia 8000 4G | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2021 | D | LTE/HSPA/GSM | Qualcomm MSM8909 Snapdragon 210 | Bar | 2 MP | |
| Nokia 810 (car phone) | Monochrome | 2003 | D | GSM | Unknown | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 8110 | 84x48 Monochrome | 1996 | D | GSM | Unknown, DCT2 | Bar (slide cover) | None | |
| Nokia 8110i | 84x48 Monochrome | 1997 | D | GSM | Unknown, DCT2 | Bar (slide cover) | None | |
| Nokia 8110 4G | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2018 | D | LTE/HSPA/GSM | Qualcomm MSM8905 Snapdragon 205 | Bar (slide cover) | 2 MP | |
| Nokia 8146 | 84x48 Monochrome | 1998 | D | GSM | Unknown, DCT2 | Bar (slide cover) | None | |
| Nokia 8148 | 84x48 Monochrome | 1998 | D | GSM | Unknown, DCT2 | Bar (slide cover) | None | |
| Nokia 8148i | 84x48 Monochrome | 1998 | D | GSM | Unknown, DCT2 | Bar (slide cover) | None | |
| Nokia 8208 | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | D | CDMA | Qualcomm QSC6085 | Slide | 3.2 MP | |
| Nokia 8210 | 84x48 Monochrome | 1999 | D | GSM | Texas Instruments MAD2WD1, DCT3 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 8210 4G | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2022 | D | LTE, HSDPA/ HSUPA, GSM | Unisoc T107 | Bar | 0.3 MP | |
| Nokia 8250 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2001 | D | GSM | Texas Instruments MAD2WD1, DCT3 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 8260 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2000 | D | TDMA/AMPS | Texas Instruments MAD2WD1, DCT3 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 8265 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2002 | D | TDMA/AMPS | Texas Instruments MAD2WD1, DCT3 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 8265i | 84x48 Monochrome | 2002 | D | TDMA/AMPS | Texas Instruments MAD2WD1, DCT3 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 8270 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2002 | D | CDMA | Texas Instruments MAD2WD1, DCT3 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 8277 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2002 | D | CDMA | Texas Instruments MAD2WD1, DCT3 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 8280 | 96x65 Monochrome | 2002 | D | CDMA2000 1x | Texas Instruments MAD2WD1, DCT3 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 8280i | 96x65 Monochrome | 2002 | D | CDMA2000 1x | Texas Instruments MAD2WD1, DCT3 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 8290 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2001 | D | GSM | Texas Instruments MAD2WD1, DCT3 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 8310 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2001 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 8390 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2002 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia 8587 | 120x160 12-bit (4096) Color | 2002 | D | CDMA | Qualcomm MSM5100 | Flip | None | Exclusive only to Korean Market |
| Nokia 8600 Luna | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | D | GSM | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | Bar (slide cover) | 2.0 MP | |
| Nokia 8800 | 208x208 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2005 | D | GSM | Nokia TIKUEDGE, DCT4.5 | Bar (slide cover) | SVGA | |
| Nokia 8800 Arte | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | D | GSM/UMTS | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | Bar (slide cover) | 3.15 MP | |
| Nokia 8800 Carbon Arte | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2008 | D | GSM/UMTS | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | Bar (slide cover) | 3.15 MP | |
| Nokia 8800 Gold Arte | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2008 | D | GSM/UMTS | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | Bar (slide cover) | 3.15 MP | |
| Nokia 8800 Sapphire Arte | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2008 | D | GSM/UMTS | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | Bar (slide cover) | 3.15 MP | |
| Nokia 8800 Sirocco Edition | 208x208 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2006 | D | GSM | Nokia TIKUEDGE, DCT4 | Bar (slide cover) | 2.0 MP | |
| Nokia 8801 | 208x208 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2005 | D | GSM | Nokia TIKUEDGE, DCT4 | Bar (slide cover) | SVGA | |
| Nokia 8810 | 84x48 Monochrome | 1998 | D | GSM | Texas Instruments MAD2, DCT3 | Soft-slide Chrome cover | None | |
| Nokia 8850 | 84x48 Monochrome | 1999 | D | GSM | Texas Instruments MAD2WD1, DCT3 | Bar (slide cover) | None | |
| Nokia 8855 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2001 | D | GSM | Texas Instruments MAD2WD1, DCT3 | Bar (slide cover) | None | |
| Nokia 8860 | 84x48 Monochrome | 1999 | D | TDMA/AMPS | Texas Instruments MAD2, DCT3 | Bar (slide cover) | None | |
| Nokia 8877 | Monochrome | 2001 | D | GPRS, EDGE, CDMA | Qualcomm MSM5105 | Flip | None | Exclusive only to Korean Market |
| Nokia 8887 | Monochrome | 2001 | D | GPRS, EDGE, CDMA | Qualcomm MSM5105 | Flip | None | Exclusive only to Korean Market |
| Nokia 8890 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2000 | D | GSM | Texas Instruments MAD2WD1, DCT3 | Bar (slide cover) | None | |
| Nokia 8910 | 84x48 Monochrome | 2002 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Auto-slide Titanium cover | None | |
| Nokia 8910i | 96x65 12-bit (4096) Color | 2003 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Auto-slide Titanium cover | None |
Nokia 9xxx – Communicator series (1996–2007)
[edit]The Nokia 9000 series was reserved for the Communicator series, but the last Communicator, the E90 Communicator, was an Eseries phone.
| Phone model | Screen type | Released | Status | Technology | Chipset, HW platform | Form factor | Camera | Images |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nokia 9000 Communicator | 640x200 Monochrome | 1996 | D | GSM | Unknown, DCT1 | Flip | None | |
| Nokia 9000i Communicator | 640x200 Monochrome | 1997 | D | GSM | Unknown, DCT1 | Flip | None | |
| Nokia 9000iL Communicator | 640x200 Monochrome | 1997 | D | GSM | Unknown, DCT1 | Flip | None | |
| Nokia 9110 Communicator | 640x200 Monochrome | 1998 | D | GSM | Texas Instruments MAD2, DCT3 | Flip | None | |
| Nokia 9110i Communicator | 640x200 Monochrome | 2000 | D | GSM | Texas Instruments MAD2, DCT3 | Flip | None | |
| Nokia 9210 Communicator | 640x200 12-bit (4096) Color | 2001 | D | GSM | Nokia MADLinda, DCT3 | Flip | None | |
| Nokia 9210i Communicator | 640x200 12-bit (4096) Color | 2002 | D | GSM | Nokia MADLinda, DCT3 | Flip | None | |
| Nokia 9290 Communicator | 640x200 12-bit (4096) Color | 2002 | D | GSM | Nokia MADLinda, DCT3 | Flip | None | |
| Nokia 9300 | 640x200 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2004 | D | GSM | Unknown, DCT4 | Flip | None | |
| Nokia 9300i | 640x200 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2006 | D | GSM | Unknown, DCT4 | Flip | None | |
| Nokia 9500 Communicator | 640x200 16-bit (65,536) Color | 2004 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP8M, DCT4 | Flip | VGA |
Lettered series: C/E/N/X (2005–2011)
[edit]Cseries (2010–2011)
[edit]The Nokia Cseries is an affordable series optimized for social networking and sharing. The range includes a mix of feature phones running Series 40 and some smartphones running Symbian.
| Phone model | Screen type | Released | Status | Technology | Platform | Chipset, HW platform | Form factor | Camera | Internal Memory | Images |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nokia C1-00 | 128x160 pixels (65K) | 2010 | D | GSM | Series 30 | Infineon X-GOLD 110 PMB7900, DCT4+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia C1-01 | 128x160 pixels (65K) | 2011 Q2 | D | GSM GPRS EDGE | Series 40 6th Edition | Infineon PMB8810, BB5.0 | Bar | VGA (0.3 MP) | 16 MB | |
| Nokia C1-02 | 128x160 pixels (65K) | 2011 Q4 | D | GSM GPRS | Infineon PMB8810, BB5.0 | Bar | None | |||
| Nokia C1-03 | 128x160 pixels (65K) | 2011 Q2 | D | GSM GPRS | Infineon PMB8810, BB5.0 | Bar | VGA (0.3 MP) | 32 MB | ||
| Nokia C2-00 | 128x160 pixels (65K) | D | GSM GPRS EDGE | Infineon PMB8810, BB5.0 | Bar | VGA (0.3 MP) | ||||
| Nokia C2-01 | 240x320 pixels (256K) | 2010 | D | GSM EDGE UMTS | Nokia RAP3GS2, BB5.0 | Bar | 3.2 MP | |||
| Nokia C2-02 | 240x320 pixels (262K) | 2011 Q3 | D | GSM GPRS EDGE | Series 40 6th Edition feature pack 1 | Unknown, BB5.0 | Slider, Touch and Type | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia C2-03 | 240x320 pixels (262K) | 2011 Q3 | D | GSM GPRS EDGE | Series 40 | Unknown, BB5.0 | Slider, Touch and Type | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia C2-05 | 240x320 pixels (65K) | 2011 Q4 | D | GSM GPRS EDGE | Infineon X-Gold213 XMM2130, BB5.0 | Slider, Touch and Type | VGA (0.3 MP) | |||
| Nokia C2-06 | 240x320 pixels (262K) | 2011 Q3 | D | GSM GPRS EDGE | Unknown, BB5.0 | Slider, Touch and Type | 2.0 MP | |||
| Nokia C3-00 | 320x240 pixels (256K) Color TFT | 2010 Q2 | D | GSM EDGE WLAN | Series 40 6th Edition | Broadcom BCM21351, BB5.0 | QWERTY Bar | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia C3-01 | 240x320 (256K) TFT Color | 2010 Q4 | D | GSM EDGE, UMTS, WLAN | Series 40 6th Edition feature pack 1 | Nokia RAPUYAMA, BB5.0 | Bar, Touch and Type | 5.0 MP | ||
| Nokia C3-01 Gold Edition (Touch and Type) | 240x320 (256K) TFT Color | D | Nokia RAPUYAMA, BB5.0 | Bar | 5.0 MP | |||||
| Nokia C5-00 | 240x320 pixels (16M) Color TFT | 2010 Q2 | D | GSM/UMTS | S60 3rd Edition FP2 | Nokia RAPUYAMA, BB5.0 | Bar | 5.0 MP | ||
| Nokia C5-03 | 640x360 pixels (16M) transmissive | 2010 Q4 | D | GSM EGPRS UMTS WLAN WCDMA/HSDPA EGSM | S60 5th Edition | Nokia RAPUYAMA, BB5.0 | Touchscreen Bar | 5.0 MP | ||
| Nokia C6-00 | 640x360 pixels (16M) | 2010 Q2 | D | GSM EGPRS UMTS WLAN WCDMA/HSDPA EGSM | Nokia RAPIDOYAWE, BB5.0 | QWERTY Slider | 5.0 MP | |||
| Nokia C6-01 | 640x360 pixels (16M) | 2010 Q4 | D | GSM EGPRS UMTS WLAN WCDMA/HSDPA EGSM | Symbian^3 | Nokia RAPUYAMA, BB5.0 | Touchscreen Bar | 8.0 MP (720p HD) | ||
| Nokia C7-00 | 640x360 pixels (16M) | 2010 Q4 | D | GSM EGPRS UMTS WLAN WCDMA/HSDPA EGSM | Symbian^3 | Nokia RAPUYAMA, BB5.0 | Touchscreen Monoblock |
C1-00 and C2-00 are dual SIM phones, but with Nokia C1-00 both SIM cards cannot be utilized at the same time.
Eseries (2006–2011)
[edit]The Nokia Eseries is an enterprise-class series with business-optimized products. They are all smartphones and run Symbian.
| Phone model | Screen type | Released | Status | Technology | Platform | Chipset, HW platform | Form factor | Camera | Images |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nokia E50 | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2006 | D | GSM/EDGE | S60 3rd Edition | Nokia RAPGSM, BB5.0 | Bar | 1.3 megapixels | |
| Nokia E51 | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | D | GSM/EDGE/HSDPA/3G/WLAN | S60 3rd Edition FP1 | Nokia RAPIDOYAWE, BB5.0 | Bar | 2 megapixels | |
| Nokia E52 | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | D | GSM/EDGE/HSDPA/3G/WLAN | S60 3rd Edition FP2 | Nokia RAPUYAMA, BB5.0 | Bar | 3.2 megapixels | |
| Nokia E55 | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | D | GSM/EDGE/HSDPA/3G/WLAN | Nokia RAPUYAMA, BB5.0 | half QWERTY Bar | 3.2 megapixels | |||
| Nokia E60 | 352x416 24-bit (16M) Color | 2006 | D | GSM/UMTS/WLAN | S60 3rd Edition | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | Bar | None | |
| Nokia E61 | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | D | GSM/UMTS/WLAN | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | QWERTY Bar | VGA | |||
| Nokia E61i | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | D | GSM/EDGE/UMTS/WLAN | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | QWERTY Bar | 2 megapixels | ||
| Nokia E62 | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2006 | D | GSM/EDGE | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | QWERTY Bar | VGA | ||
| Nokia E63 | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2008 | D | 3G/GSM/EDGE/UMTS/WLAN | S60 3rd Edition FP1 | Nokia RAPIDO, BB5.0 | QWERTY Bar | 2 megapixels | |
| Nokia E65 | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | D | GSM/EDGE/UMTS/WLAN | S60 3rd Edition | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | Slider | 2 megapixels | |
| Nokia E65 Internet Limited Edition | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | D | GSM/EDGE/UMTS/WLAN | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | Slider | 2 megapixels | |||
| Nokia E66 | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2008 | D | GSM/EDGE/UMTS/WLAN | S60 3rd Edition FP1 | Nokia RAPIDO, BB5.0 | Slider | 3.15 megapixels | |
| Nokia E70 | 352x416 24-bit (16M) Color | 2006 | D | GSM/WLAN/UMTS (Europe/Asia) | S60 3rd Edition | Unknown, BB5.0 | Bar (flip keyboard) | 2 megapixels | |
| Nokia E71 | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2008 | D | GSM/EDGE/UMTS/WLAN | S60 3rd Edition FP1 | Nokia RAPIDO, BB5.0 | QWERTY Bar | 3.2 megapixels | |
| Nokia E72 | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | D | GSM/EDGE/HSDPA/HSUPA/WLAN | S60 3rd Edition FP2 | Nokia RAPUYAMA, BB5.0 | QWERTY Bar | 5.0 megapixels | |
| Nokia E73 Mode | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2010 | D | GSM/UMTS, EDGE, HSDPA, HSUPA, 3.5G, WLAN | Nokia RAPUYAMA, BB5.0 | QWERTY Bar | 5.0 megapixels | ||
| Nokia E75 | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | D | GSM/EDGE/UMTS/3G/WLAN | Freescale MXC300-3, BB5.0 | QWERTY Slider | 3.2 megapixels | ||
| Nokia E5-00 | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2010 | D | GSM/EDGE/HSDPA/3G | Nokia RAPUYAMA, BB5.0 | QWERTY Bar | 5.0 megapixels | ||
| Nokia E6-00 | 640x480 24-bit (16M) Color | 2011 | D | GSM/EDGE/UMTS/HSPA | Symbian^3 | Nokia RAPUYAMA, BB5.0 | QWERTY touch and type | 8.0 megapixels | |
| Nokia E7-00 | 640x360 24-bit (16M) Color | D | GSM/EDGE/HSDPA/3G | Nokia RAPUYAMA, BB5.0 | QWERTY touchsreen Bar | 8.0 megapixels | |||
| Nokia E90 Communicator | 800x352 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | D | GSM/EDGE/3G/WLAN | S60 3rd Edition FP1 | Nokia RAPIDO, BB5.0 | Flip | 3.15 megapixels |
Nseries (2005–2011)
[edit]The Nseries are highly advanced smartphones, with strong multimedia and connectivity features and build as many other features as possible into one device.
| Phone model | Screen type | Released | Status | Technology | Platform | Chipset, HW platform | Form factor | Camera | Images |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nokia N70 | 176x208 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2005 | D | GSM/EDGE/UMTS | S60 2nd Edition | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | Bar | 2.0 megapixels | |
| Nokia N70 Music Edition | 176x208 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2006 | D | GSM/UMTS | S60 2nd Edition | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | Bar | ||
| Nokia N71 | 320x240 18-bit (262,144) Color | D | GSM/UMTS | S60 3rd Edition | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | Flip | |||
| Nokia N72 | 176x208 18-bit (262,144) Color | D | GSM | S60 2nd Edition | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | Bar | |||
| Nokia N73 | 320x240 18-bit (262,144) Color | D | GSM/EDGE/UMTS | S60 3rd Edition | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | Bar | 3.2 megapixels | ||
| Nokia N73 Music Edition | 2007 | D | GSM/EDGE/UMTS | S60 9.1 3rd Edition | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | Bar | |||
| Nokia N75 | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2006 | D | GSM/UMTS | S60 3rd Edition | Texas Instruments OMAP 1710, BB5.0 | Flip | 2.0 megapixels | |
| Nokia N76 | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | D | GSM/UMTS | S60 3rd Edition | Nokia RAPIDO, BB5.0 | Flip | 2.0 megapixels | |
| Nokia N77 | 329x240 24-bit (16M) Color | D | GSM/UMTS DVB-H | S60 3rd Edition | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | Bar | 2.0 megapixels | ||
| Nokia N78 | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | 2008 | D | GSM EGPRS UMTS Wi-Fi WCDMA HSDPA EGSM | S60 3rd Edition FP2 | Nokia RAPIDO, BB5.0 | Bar | 3.2 megapixels | |
| Nokia N79 | 320x240 24-bit (16M) Color | D | GSM EGPRS UMTS Wi-Fi WCDMA HSDPA EGSM | S60 3rd Edition | Nokia RAPIDO, BB5.0 | Bar | 5.0 megapixels | ||
| Nokia N8 | 360x640 (16M) Capacitive AMOLED touchscreen | 2010 | D | GSM EGPRS UMTS WLAN WCDMA HSDPA EGSM | Symbian^3 | Nokia RAPUYAMA, BB5.0 | Bar | 12.0 megapixels (720p HD) |
|
| Nokia N80 | 352x416 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2006 | D | GSM/UMTS | S60 3rd Edition | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | Slide | 3.2 megapixels | |
| Nokia N81 | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | D | GSM/UMTS/WLAN | S60 3rd Edition FP1 | Nokia RAPIDO, BB5.0 | Slide | 2.0 megapixels | |
| Nokia N81 8GB | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | D | GSM/UMTS/Wi-Fi | S60 9.2 3rd Edition FP1 | Nokia RAPIDO, BB5.0 | Slide | 2.0 megapixels | |
| Nokia N82 | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | D | GSM EGPRS UMTS Wi-Fi WCDMA HSDPA EGSM | S60 3rd Edition FP1 | Nokia RAPIDO, BB5.0 | Bar | 5.0 megapixels | |
| Nokia N85 | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2008 | D | GSM EGPRS UMTS Wi-Fi WCDMA HSDPA EGSM | S60 3rd Edition FP2 | Nokia RAPIDOYAWE, BB5.0 | 2-way Slide | 5.0 megapixels | |
| Nokia N86 8MP | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | D | GSM EGPRS UMTS Wi-Fi WCDMA HSDPA EGSM | S60 3rd Edition FP2 | Nokia RAPIDOYAWE, BB5.0 | Slide | 8.0 megapixels | |
| Nokia N9 | 854x480 (16M) Capacitive AMOLED touchscreen | 2011 | D | GSM EGPRS UMTS Wi-Fi WCDMA HSDPA EGSM | MeeGo 1.2 Harmattan | Texas Instruments TMS320C64x | Bar | 8.0 megapixels | |
| Nokia N90 | 352x416 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2005 | D | GSM/UMTS | S60 2nd Edition | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | Flip | 2.0 megapixels | |
| Nokia N900 | 800x480 24-bit (16M) Resistive touchscreen | 2009 | D | GSM EGPRS UMTS WLAN WCDMA HSDPA EGSM | Maemo 5 | Texas Instruments OMAP 3430 | Touchscreen with slide-out QWERTY keyboard | 5.0 megapixels | |
| Nokia N91 | 176x208 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2005 | D | GSM/UMTS | S60 3rd Edition | Nokia RAP3G, BB5.0 | Slide | 2.0 megapixels | |
| Nokia N92 | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | D | GSM/UMTS | S60 3rd Edition | Unknown, BB5.0 | Flip | 2.0 megapixels | |
| Nokia N93 | 240x320 18-bit (262,144) Color | 2006 | D | GSM/UMTS | S60 3rd Edition | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | Flip | 3.2 megapixels | |
| Nokia N93i | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2007 | D | GSM EGPRS UMTS WLAN WCDMA HSDPA EGSM | S60 3rd Edition | Nokia RAP3GS, BB5.0 | Flip | 3.2 megapixels | |
| Nokia N95 | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color 2.6in | 2006 | D | GSM EGPRS UMTS WLAN WCDMA HSDPA EGSM | S60 3rd Edition FP1 | Nokia RAPIDO, BB5.0 | 2-way Slide | 5.0 megapixels | |
| Nokia N95 8GB | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color 2.8in | 2007 | D | GSM EGPRS UMTS Wi-Fi WCDMA HSDPA EGSM | S60 3rd Edition FP1 | Nokia RAPIDO, BB5.0 | 2-way Slide | 5.0 megapixels | |
| Nokia N950 | 854x480 24-bit (16M) Capacitive touchscreen | 2011 | Not released to market | GSM EGPRS UMTS WLAN WCDMA HSDPA EGSM | MeeGo 1.2 Harmattan | Unknown | QWERTY keyboard, with tilt display |
8.0 megapixels | |
| Nokia N96 | 240x320 24-bit (16M) Color | 2008 | D | GSM EGPRS UMTS WLAN WCDMA HSDPA EGSM DVB-H | S60 3rd Edition FP2 | Nokia RAPIDO, BB5.0 | 2-way Slide | 5.0 megapixels | |
| Nokia N97 | 640x360 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | D | GSM EGPRS UMTS WLAN WCDMA HSDPA EGSM | S60 5th Edition | Nokia RAPIDOYAWE, BB5.0 | QWERTY keyboard, with tilt display |
5.0 megapixels | |
| Nokia N97 mini | 360x640 24-bit (16M) Color | 2009 | D | GSM EGPRS UMTS WLAN WCDMA HSDPA EGSM | S60 5th Edition | Nokia RAPIDOYAWE, BB5.0 | QWERTY keyboard, with tilt display |
5.0 megapixels |
Note:
- Although part of the Nseries, the Nokia N800 and N810 Internet Tablets did not include phone functionality. See the Internet Tablets section.
- The Nokia N950 was meant to be the Nokia N9 with the old Nokia N9 'Lankku' being N9-01, however the N9-00 model number was used for the all touch 'Lankku' with the original design being the MeeGo developer-only N950.
The Nokia Xseries targets a young audience with a focus on music and entertainment. Like the Cseries, it is a mix of both Series 30/40/ feature phones and Series 60/Symbian smartphones.
| Phone model | Screen type | Released | Status | Technology | Platform | Chipset, HW platform | Form factor | Camera | Images |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nokia X1-00 | 128x160 TFT Color | 2011 | D | GSM EDGE | Series 30 | Unknown | Bar | N/A | |
| Nokia X1-01 | 128x160 TFT Color | D | GSM EDGE | Unknown | N/A | ||||
| Nokia X2-00 | 240x320 (256K) TFT Color | 2010 | D | GSM EDGE | Series 40 6th Edition | Broadcom BCM21351, BB5.0 | 5 MP | ||
| Nokia X2-01 | 320x240 (256K) TFT Color | 2010 | D | GSM EDGE | Broadcom BCM21351, BB5.0 | QWERTY Bar | 0.3 MP | ||
| Nokia X2-02 | 320x240 (65K) TFT Color | 2011 | D | GSM EDGE | Infineon X-GOLD 213 PMB8810, BB5.0 | Bar | 2 MP | ||
| Nokia X3-00 | 240x320 (256K) TFT Color | 2009 | D | GSM EDGE | Unknown, BB5.0 | Slider | 3.2 MP | ||
| Nokia X3-02 (Touch and Type) | 240x320 (256K) TFT Color | 2010 | D | GSM EDGE, UMTS, WLAN | Series 40 6th Edition feature pack 1 | Unknown, BB5.0 | Bar | 5 MP | |
| Nokia X5-00 | 240x320 (16M) TFT Color | 2010 | D | TD-SCDMA, GSM, UMTS, WLAN | Series 40 6th Edition | Unknown, BB5.0 | |||
| Nokia X5-01 | 320x240 (16M) TFT Color | 2010 | D | GSM, UMTS, WLAN | S60 3rd Edition FP2 | Nokia RAPUYAMA, BB5.0 | Slider | ||
| Nokia X6-00 | 640x360 (nHD) (16M) Color (Capacitive touchscreen) | 2009 (Comes With Music/32GB) 2010 (16GB, 8 GB) |
D | GSM EDGE UMTS WLAN | S60 5th Edition | Nokia RAPIDOYAWE, BB5.0 | Bar | ||
| Nokia X7-00 | 640x360 AMOLED (16M) Color (Capacitive touchscreen) | 2011 | D | GSM EDGE UMTS WLAN | Symbian^3 'Anna' (PR2.0) | Nokia RAPUYAMA, BB5.0 | Bar | 8 MP |
3-digit series Symbian phones (2011–2012)
[edit]Since the Nokia 500, Nokia has changed the naming rule for Symbian^3 phones.
| Phone model | Screen type | Released | Status | Technology | Chipset, HW platform | Operating system | Form factor | Camera | Images |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nokia 500 | 360x640 | 2011 | D | GSM, EDGE, WCDMA, HSDPA, HSUPA, WLAN | Unknown, BB5.0 | Symbian Anna | Touch Bar | 5.0 MP | |
| Nokia 600 | 360x640 | C | GSM, EDGE, WCDMA, HSDPA, HSUPA, WLAN | Unknown, BB5.0 | Nokia Belle | ||||
| Nokia 603 | 360x640 | D | GSM, EDGE, WCDMA, HSDPA, HSUPA, WLAN | Nokia RAPUYAMA, BB5.0 | Nokia Belle | ||||
| Nokia 700 | 360x640 | D | GSM, EDGE, WCDMA, HSDPA, HSUPA, WLAN | Unknown, BB5.0 | Nokia Belle | ||||
| Nokia 701 | 360x640 | D | GSM, EDGE, WCDMA, HSDPA, HSUPA, WLAN | Unknown, BB5.0 | Nokia Belle | 8.0 MP | |||
| Nokia 808 PureView | 360x640 | 2012 | D | GSM, EDGE, WCDMA, HSDPA, HSUPA, WLAN | Unknown, BB5.0 | Nokia Belle | 41 MP |
Worded series: Asha/Lumia/X (2011–2014)
[edit]The Nokia Asha series is an affordable series optimized for social networking and sharing, meant for first time users. All phones run Series 40 except Asha 230 and 50x phones, which run on the Nokia Asha platform.
| Phone model | Screen type | Released | Status | Technology | Platform | Form factor | Camera | Images |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nokia Asha 200/201 | 320x240 pixels (256K) | 2011 Q4 | D | GSM GPRS EGPRS | Series 40 6th Edition feature pack 1 | QWERTY Bar | 2.0 MP | |
| Nokia Asha 202 | 240x320 pixels (256K) | 2012 Q2 | D | Touch and Type Bar | ||||
| Nokia Asha 203 | 240x320 pixels (256K) | D | ||||||
| Nokia Asha 205 | 320x240 pixels (56K) | 2012 Q4 | D | GSM WCDMA GPRS EGPRS | QWERTY Bar | 0.3 MP | ||
| Nokia Asha 210 | 320x240 pixels | 2013 Q2 | D | GSM GPRS EDGE WLAN | Series 40 Asha | QWERTY Monoblock | 2 MP | |
| Nokia Asha 300 | 240x320 pixels (256K) | 2011 Q4 | D | GSM WCDMA GPRS EGPRS HSDPA | Series 40 6th Edition feature pack 1 | Touch and Type Bar | 5 MP | |
| Nokia Asha 302 | 240x320 pixels (256K) | 2012 Q1 | D | GSM WCDMA GPRS EGPRS HSDPA HSUPA WLAN | Series 40 6th Edition feature pack 1 | QWERTY Bar | 3.2 MP | |
| Nokia Asha 303 | 240x320 pixels (256K) | 2011 Q4 | D | GSM WCDMA GPRS EGPRS HSDPA HSUPA WLAN | Series 40 6th Edition feature pack 1 Touch and Type | 3.2 MP | ||
| Nokia Asha 305 | 240x400 pixels (65K) | 2012 Q3 | D | GSM GPRS EGPRS | Series 40 Asha Dual-SIM | Full touch Bar | 2 MP | |
| Nokia Asha 306 | 240x400 pixels (65K) | 2012 Q3 | D | GSM GPRS EGPRS WLAN | Series 40 Asha | |||
| Nokia Asha 308 | 240x400 pixels (56K) | 2012 Q4 | D | GSM GPRS EGPRS | ||||
| Nokia Asha 309 | 240x400 pixels (56K) | 2012 Q4 | D | GSM GPRS EGPRS WLAN | ||||
| Nokia Asha 310 | 240x400 pixels (65K) | 2013 Q1 | D | GSM GPRS EGPRS WLAN | ||||
| Nokia Asha 311 | 240x400 pixels (65K) | 2012 Q3 | D | GSM GPRS EGPRS WCDMA HSDPA HSUPA WLAN | 3.2 MP | |||
| Nokia Asha 230 | 320x240 pixels (262K) | 2014 Q2 | D | GSM GPRS EGPRS | Nokia Asha platform 1.1 | 1.3 MP | ||
| Nokia Asha 500 | 320x240 pixels (262K) | 2012 Q4 | D | GSM GPRS EGPRS WLAN | Nokia Asha platform 1.1.1 | 2 MP | ||
| Nokia Asha 501 | 320x240 pixels | 2013 Q2 | D | GSM GPRS EGPRS WLAN | Nokia Asha platform 1.0 | 3.2 MP | ||
| Nokia Asha 502 | 320x240 pixels (262K) | 2013 Q4 | D | GSM GPRS EGPRS WLAN | Nokia Asha platform 1.1 | 5 MP w/ flash | ||
| Nokia Asha 503 | 320x240 pixels (262K) | 2013 Q4 | D | GSM GPRS EGPRS WCDMA HSDPA HSUPA WLAN | Nokia Asha platform 1.2 |
Lumia (2011–2014)
[edit]Lumia is a series of smartphones running Windows Phone. It also includes the Nokia Lumia 2520, a Windows RT-powered tablet computer. The series was sold to Microsoft in 2014 who branded these products under the name Microsoft.
Devices with Microsoft branding are not listed here.
| Phone model | Screen type | Released | Technology | Status | Operating system | Chipset | Camera | Codename | Images |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nokia Lumia 505 | 3.7" AMOLED | 2013 | GSM, EDGE, HSDPA, WLAN | D | Windows Phone 7.8 | Qualcomm MSM7227A Snapdragon S1 | 8MP | Glory | |
| Nokia Lumia 510 | 4" TFT | 2012 | GSM, EDGE, HSDPA, WLAN | D | Windows Phone 7.5 (Mango) | Qualcomm MSM7227A Snapdragon S1 | 5MP | Glory | |
| Nokia Lumia 520 | 4" IPS | 2013 | GSM, EDGE, HSDPA, WLAN | D | Windows Phone 8 | Qualcomm MSM8227 | 5MP | Fame | |
| Nokia Lumia 525 | 4" IPS | 2013 | GSM, EDGE, HSDPA, WLAN | D | Windows Phone 8 | Qualcomm MSM8227 | 5MP | Glee | |
| Nokia Lumia 530 | 4" IPS | 2014 | GSM, EDGE, HSDPA, WLAN | D | Windows Phone 8.1 | Qualcomm Snapdragon 200 | 5MP | Rock | |
| Nokia Lumia 610 | 3.7" TFT | 2012 | GSM, EDGE, UMTS, WLAN | D | Windows Phone 7.5 (Mango) | Qualcomm MSM7227A Snapdragon S1 | 5MP | Cliff | |
| Nokia Lumia 620 | 3.8" IPS | 2013 | GSM, EDGE, HSDPA, WLAN | D | Windows Phone 8 | Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 | 5MP | Sand | |
| Nokia Lumia 625 | 4.7" IPS | 2013 | GSM, LTE | D | Windows Phone 8 | Qualcomm MSM8930 Snapdragon 400 | 5MP | Max | |
| Nokia Lumia 630 | 4.5" IPS | Build 2014 | GSM, EDGE, HSPDA, WLAN, LTE | D | Windows Phone 8.1 | Qualcomm Snapdragon 400 | 5MP | Moneypenny | |
| Nokia Lumia 635 | 4.5" IPS | Build 2014 | LTE | D | Windows Phone 8.1 | Qualcomm Snapdragon 400 | 5MP | Moneypenny | |
| Nokia Lumia 636 | 4.5" IPS | Build 2014 | LTE-FDD, LTE-TDD | D | Windows Phone 8.1 | Qualcomm Snapdragon 400 | 5MP | Moneypenny | |
| Nokia Lumia 638 | 4.5" IPS | Build 2014 | LTE-FDD, LTE-TDD | D | Windows Phone 8.1 | Qualcomm Snapdragon 400 | 5MP | Moneypenny | |
| Nokia Lumia 710 | 3.7" AMOLED | Nokia World 2011 | GSM, EDGE, UMTS, WLAN | D | Windows Phone 7.5 (Mango) | Qualcomm MSM8255 Snapdragon S2 | 5MP | Sabre | |
| Nokia Lumia 720 | 4.3" IPS | 2013 | GSM, EDGE, HSDPA, WLAN | D | Windows Phone 8 | Qualcomm MSM8227 | 6.7MP | Zeal | |
| Nokia Lumia 730 | 4.7" AMOLED | IFA 2014 | GSM, EDGE, HSPDA | D | Windows Phone 8.1 | Qualcomm Snapdragon 400 | 6.7MP | Superman | |
| Nokia Lumia 735 | 4.7" AMOLED | IFA 2014 | GSM, EDGE, HSPDA, LTE | D | Windows Phone 8.1 | Qualcomm Snapdragon 400 | 6.7MP | Superman | |
| Nokia Lumia 800 | 3.7" AMOLED | Nokia World 2011 | GSM, EDGE, UMTS, WLAN | D | Windows Phone 7.5 (Mango) | Qualcomm MSM8255 Snapdragon S2 | 8.7MP | Searay | |
| Nokia Lumia 810 | 4.3" AMOLED | 2012 | GSM, EDGE, HSDPA, WLAN | D[10] | Windows Phone 8 | Qualcomm MSM8960 Snapdragon S4 Plus | 8.7MP | Torpedo | |
| Nokia Lumia 820 | 4.3" AMOLED | Nokia World 2012 | GSM, EDGE, UMTS, WLAN, 4G LTE – LTE 800, 900, 1800, 2100 & 2600 | D | Windows Phone 8 | Qualcomm MSM8960 Snapdragon S4 Plus | 8.7MP | Arrow | |
| Nokia Lumia 822 | 4.3" AMOLED | 2012 | GSM, EDGE, HSDPA, WLAN | D | Windows Phone 8 | Qualcomm MSM8960 Snapdragon S4 Plus | 8.7MP | Atlas | |
| Nokia Lumia 830 | 5" IPS | 2014 | GSM, EDGE, HSPDA, LTE | D | Windows Phone 8.1 | Qualcomm Snapdragon 400 | 10MP | Tesla | |
| Nokia Lumia 900 | 4.3" AMOLED | CES 2012 | GSM, EDGE, UMTS, WLAN, 4G LTE – LTE 700 & 1700 | D | Windows Phone 7.5 (Mango) | Qualcomm APQ8055 Snapdragon S2 | 8.7MP | Ace | |
| Nokia Lumia 920 | 4.5" IPS | Nokia World 2012 | GSM, EDGE, UMTS, WLAN, 4G – LTE 800, 900, 1800, 2100 & 2600 TD-SCDMA (China only) |
D | Windows Phone 8 | Qualcomm MSM8960 Snapdragon S4 Plus | 8.7MP | Phi | |
| Nokia Lumia 925 | 4.5" AMOLED | 2013 | GSM, EDGE, HSPDA, LTE, WLAN | D | Windows Phone 8 | Qualcomm MSM8960 Snapdragon S4 Plus | 8.7MP | Catwalk | |
| Nokia Lumia 928 | 4.5" AMOLED | 2013 | D | Windows Phone 8 | Qualcomm MSM8960 Snapdragon S4 Plus | 8.7MP | Laser | ||
| Nokia Lumia 930 | 5" AMOLED | Build 2014 | GSM, EDGE, HSPDA, LTE, WLAN | D | Windows Phone 8.1 | Qualcomm MSM8974 Snapdragon 800 | 20MP | Martini | |
| Nokia Lumia 1020 | 4.5" AMOLED | 2013 | D | Windows Phone 8 | Qualcomm MSM8960 Snapdragon S4 Plus | 41MP | EOS | ||
| Nokia Lumia 1320 | 6" IPS | Nokia world 2013 | D | Windows Phone 8 | Qualcomm MSM8230AB Snapdragon 400 (GSM), Qualcomm MSM8930AB Snapdragon 400 (LTE) | 5MP | Batman | ||
| Nokia Lumia 1520 | 6" IPS | Nokia world 2013 | D | Windows Phone 8 | Qualcomm MSM8974 Snapdragon 800 | 20MP | Bandit | ||
| Nokia Lumia 2520 | 10.1" IPS | Nokia world 2013 | D | Windows RT | Qualcomm MSM8974 Snapdragon 800 | 6.7MP | Sirius | ||
| Nokia Lumia ICON | 5" AMOLED | 2014 | GSM, EDGE, HSPDA, LTE, WLAN | D | Windows Phone 8.1 | Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 | 20MP | Vanquish |
X Family (2014)
[edit]The Nokia X family is a range of Android smartphones from Nokia. These were the first ever Nokia phones to run Google's Android OS.
| Phone Model | Screen Type | Released | Status | Technology | Platform | Form Factor | Rear Camera | Notes | Images |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nokia X | 4" WVGA Capacitive Touch Screen | 2014 Feb | D | Nokia X software platform 1.x (Android 4.1.2) | Bar | 3.2 MP | |||
| Nokia X+ | D | ||||||||
| Nokia XL | 5" WVGA Capacitive Touch Screen | D | 5 MP | ||||||
| Nokia X2 | 4.3" WVGA Capacitive Touch Screen | 2014 June | D | Clear Black Display | Nokia X software platform 2.x (Android 4.3) | ||||
| Nokia XL 4G | 5" WVGA Capacitive Touch Screen | 2014 July | D | Nokia X software platform 1.x (Android 4.3) | China mobile version |
3-digit series feature phones (2011–present)
[edit]These phones are entry-level, classic mobile phones (with relatively long lasting battery life). The series was sold in 2014 to Microsoft which continued branding these products under Nokia. Microsoft sold this series to HMD Global in 2016 which also continues branding these products under Nokia.
| Phone model | Screen type | Released | Status | Technology | Chipset, HW platform | Operating system | Form factor | Camera | Notes | Images |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nokia 100 (2011) | 128x160 | 2011 | D | GSM | Infineon X-GOLD 110 PMB7900, DCT4+ | Series 30 | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 101 (2011) | 128x160 | D | Series 30 | Bar | None | |||||
| Nokia 103 | 96x68 Monochrome | 2013 | D | Series 30 | Bar | None | ||||
| Nokia 105 (2013) | 128x128 | 2013 | D | Series 30 | Bar | None |
| |||
| Nokia 105 (2015) | 128x128 | 2015 | D | MediaTek MT6261D | Series 30+ | Bar | None | |||
| Nokia 105 (2017) | 128x160 | 2017 | D | Series 30+ | Bar | None | ||||
| Nokia 105 (2019) | 128x160 | 2019 | D | GSM | Spreadtrum SPD6531 | Series 30+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 105 4G (2021) | 240x320 | 2021 | P | GSM, HSPA, LTE | Unknown | Series 30+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 105 (2022) | 240x320 | 2022 | P | GSM | Mediatek MT6261D | Series 30+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 105+ (2022) | 240x320 | 2022 | P | GSM | Series 30+ | Bar | None | |||
| Nokia 105 (2023) | 240x320 | 2023 | P | GSM | Unknown | Series 30+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 105 4G (2023) | 240x320 | 2023 | P | GSM, HSPA, LTE | Unknown | Series 30+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 105 (2024) | 120x160 | 2023 | P | GSM | Unknown | Series 30+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 105 4G (2024) | 240x320 | 2024 | P | GSM, HSPA, LTE | Unisoc T127 | Series 30+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 106 | 128x160 | 2013 | D | GSM | Unknown, DCT4+ | Series 30 | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 106 (2018) | 128x160 | 2018 | D | Mediatek MT6261D | Series 30+ | Bar | None | |||
| Nokia 106 (2023) | 128x160 | 2023 | P | Unknown | Series 30+ | Bar | None | |||
| Nokia 107 (2013) | 128x160 | 2013 | D | Unknown, DCT4+ | Series 30 | Bar | None | |||
| Nokia 108 | 128x160 | 2013 | D | MediaTek MT6250 | Series 30+ | Bar | VGA (0.3 MP) | |||
| Nokia 108 4G | 240x320 | 2024 | P | GSM, HSPA, LTE | Unisoc T127 | Series 30+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 109 | 128x160 | 2012 | D | GSM, EDGE | Infineon PMB8810, BB5.0 | Series 40 | Bar | None | Chinese version is C1-02i | |
| Nokia 110 | Series 40 | Bar | VGA (0.3 MP) | |||||||
| Nokia 110 (2019) | 120x160 | 2019 | D | GSM | Spreadtrum SC6531E | Series 30+ | Bar | 0.1 MP | ||
| Nokia 110 4G (2021) | 120x160 | 2021 | P | GSM, HSPA, LTE | Unknown | Series 30+ | Bar | 0.1 MP | ||
| Nokia 110 (2022) | 120x160 | 2022 | P | GSM | Unknown | Series 30+ | Bar | 0.1 MP | ||
| Nokia 110 (2023) | 120x160 | 2023 | P | Unknown | Series 30+ | Bar | 0.1 MP | |||
| Nokia 110 4G (2023) | 120x160 | 2023 | P | GSM, HSPA, LTE | Unisoc T107 | Series 30+ | Bar | 0.1 MP | ||
| Nokia 110 4G (2024) | 120x160 | 2024 | P | Unisoc T127 | Series 30+ | Bar | 0.1 MP | |||
| Nokia 111 | 128x160 | 2012 | D | GSM, EDGE | Infineon PMB8810, BB5.0 | Series 40 | Bar | VGA (0.3 MP) | ||
| Nokia 112 | 128x160 | 2012 | D | GSM, EDGE | Infineon PMB8810, BB5.0 | Series 40 | Bar | VGA (0.3 MP) | ||
| Nokia 113 | 128x160 | 2012 | D | GSM, EDGE | Infineon PMB8810, BB5.0 | Series 40 | Bar | VGA (0.3 MP) | ||
| Nokia 114 | 128x160 | 2012 | D | GSM, EDGE | Infineon PMB8810, BB5.0 | Series 40 | Bar | VGA (0.3 MP) | ||
| Nokia 125 | 240x320 | 2020 | D | GSM | MediaTek MT6261 | Series 30+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 125 4G | 240x320 | 2024 | P | GSM, HSPA, LTE | Unknown | Series 30+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 130 (2014) | 128x160 | 2014 | D | GSM | Unknown | Series 30+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 130 (2017) | 128x160 | 2017 | D | GSM | Unknown | Series 30+ | Bar | VGA (0.3 MP) | ||
| Nokia 130 (2023) | 240x320 | 2023 | P | GSM | Unknown | Series 30+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 130 Music | 240x320 | 2025 | P | GSM | Unisoc 6531F | Series 30+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 150 (2016) | 128x160 | 2016 | D | GSM | MediaTek MT6261 | Series 30+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 150 (2020) | 240x320 | 2020 | D | GSM | Unknown | Series 30+ | Bar | VGA (0.3 MP) | ||
| Nokia 150 (2023) | 240x320 | 2023 | P | GSM | Unknown | Series 30+ | Bar | VGA (0.3 MP) | ||
| Nokia 150 Music | 240x320 | 2025 | P | GSM | Unisoc 6531F | Series 30+ | Bar | VGA (0.3 MP) | ||
| Nokia 206 | 240x320 | 2013 | D | GSM, EDGE | Unknown | Series 40 | Bar | 1.3 MP | ||
| Nokia 207 | 240x320 | 2013 | D | GSM, EDGE, WCDMA, HSDPA, HSUPA | Unknown | Series 40 | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 208 | 240x320 | 2013 | D | GSM, EDGE, WCDMA, HSDPA, HSUPA | Unknown | Series 40 | Bar | 1.3 MP | ||
| Nokia 210 | 240x320 | 2019 | D | GSM | Mediatek MT6260A | Series 30+ | Bar | VGA (0.3 MP) | ||
| Nokia 215 | 240x320 | 2015 | D | GSM, EDGE | MediaTek MT6260A | Series 30+ | Bar | VGA (0.3 MP) | ||
| Nokia 215 4G (2020) | 240x320 | 2020 | D | GSM, HSPA, LTE | Unisoc UMS9117 | Series 30+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 215 4G (2024) | 240x320 | 2024 | P | GSM, HSPA, LTE | Unisoc T107 | Series 30+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 216 | 240x320 | 2016 | D | GSM, EDGE | MediaTek MT6260 | Series 30+ | Bar | VGA (0.3 MP) | ||
| Nokia 220 | 240x320 | 2014 | D | GSM, GPRS | MediaTek MT6250A | Series 30+ | Bar | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 220 4G (2019) | 240x320 | 2019 | D | GSM, HSPA, LTE | Unknown | Series 30+ | Bar | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 220 4G (2024) | 240x320 | 2024 | P | GSM, HSPA, LTE | Unisoc T107 | Series 30+ | Bar | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 222 | 240x320 | 2015 | D | GSM, EDGE | Unknown | Series 30+ | Bar | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 225 | 240x320 | 2014 | D | GSM, EDGE | MediaTek MT6260 | Series 30+ | Bar | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 225 4G (2020) | 240x320 | 2020 | D | GSM, HSPA, LTE | Unisoc UMS9117 | Series 30+ | Bar | VGA (0.3 MP) | ||
| Nokia 225 4G (2024) | 240x320 | 2024 | P | GSM, HSPA, LTE | Unisoc T107 | Series 30+ | Bar | None | ||
| Nokia 230 | 240x320 | 2015 | D | GSM, EDGE | MediaTek MT6260CA | Series 30+ | Bar | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 230 (2024) | 240x320 | 2024 | P | GSM | Unisoc 6531F | Series 30+ | Bar | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 235 4G | 240x320 | 2024 | P | GSM, HSPA, LTE | Unisoc T107 | Series 30+ | Bar | 2.0 MP | ||
| Nokia 301 | 240x320 | 2013 | D | GSM, EDGE, WCDMA, HSDPA, HSUPA | Infineon PMB9803 X-GOLD614, BB5.0 | Series 40 | Bar | 3.2 MP | ||
| Nokia 515 | 240x320 | 2013 | D | GSM, EDGE, WCDMA, HSDPA, HSUPA | Unknown, BB5.0 | Series 40 | Bar | 5.0 MP |
Other phones
[edit]N-Gage – Mobile gaming devices (2003–2004)
[edit]| Phone model | Screen type | Released | Status | Technology | Chipset, HW platform | Form factor | Images |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N-Gage | 176x208 12-bit (4096) Color | 2003 | D | GSM | Nokia UPP_WD2, DCT4 | Bar | |
| N-Gage QD | 2004 | D |
PCMCIA Cardphones (1997–2003)
[edit]| Phone model | Released | Status | Technology | Generation | Form factor | Images |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cardphone | 1997 | D | GSM | DCT3 | PC card | |
| Cardphone 2.0 | 1999 | D | ||||
| D211 | 2001 | D | GSM/WLAN | DCT4 | ||
| D311 | 2003 | D |
Concept phones
[edit]Nokia developed a phone concept, never realised as a working device, in the 2008 Nokia Morph.
Tablets
[edit]VR cameras
[edit]Health
[edit]The Digital Health division of Nokia Technologies bought the following personal health devices from Withings in 2016. The division was sold back to Withings in 2018.[11]
- Nokia Steel
- Nokia Steel HR
- Nokia Body/Body+/Body Cardio
- Nokia Go
- Nokia Sleep
- Nokia BPM/BPM+
- Nokia Thermo
- Nokia Home
Services
[edit]After the sale of its mobile devices and services division to Microsoft, all of the below services were either discontinued or spun off.
Consumer services
[edit]- Accounts & SSO
- Club Nokia
- Maliit
- Mobile Web Server
- MOSH
- Nokia Accessibility
- Nokia Browser for Symbian
- Nokia Car App
- Nokia Care
- Nokia Conference
- Nokia Business Center
- Nokia Download!
- Nokia Life
- Nokia Lifeblog
- Nokia Mail and Nokia Chat
- Nokia MixRadio
- Nokia Motion Data
- Nokia Motion Monitor
- Nokia network monitor
- Nokia Pure
- Nokia Sensor
- Nokia Sports Tracker
- Nokia Sync
- Nokia Xpress
- OFono
- OTA bitmap
- Ovi
- Plazes
- Smart Messaging
- Twango
- WidSets
Nokia imaging apps
[edit]Navigation apps
[edit]Desktop apps
[edit]Humanitarian services
[edit]Developer tools
[edit]Websites
[edit]Video gaming
[edit]Operating systems
[edit]- Series 30
- Series 30+
- Series 40
- Symbian
- Linux
- Debian • Maemo 1-5 • MeeGo 1-1.2
- JAVASmarter • Nokia Asha platform
- Android • Nokia X platform
Security
[edit]IP appliances run Nokia IPSO FreeBSD based operating system, work with Check Point's firewall and VPN products.
- Nokia IP 40
- Nokia IP 130
- Nokia IP 260
- Nokia IP 265
- Nokia IP 330
- Nokia IP 350
- Nokia IP 380
- Nokia IP 390 (EU Only)
- Nokia IP 530
- Nokia IP 710
- Nokia IP 1220
- Nokia IP 1260
- Nokia IP 2250
- Nokia Horizon Manager
- Nokia Network Voyager
In 2004, Nokia began offering their own SSL VPN appliances based on IP Security Platforms and the pre-hardened Nokia IPSO operating system. Client integrity scanning and endpoint security technology was licensed from Positive Networks.[12]
- Nokia 50s
- Nokia 105s
- Nokia 500s
Internet Tablets
[edit]Nokia's Internet Tablets were designed for wireless Internet browsing and e-mail functions and did not include phone capabilities. The Nokia N800 and N810 Internet Tablets were also marketed as part of Nseries. See the Nseries section.
The Nokia N900, the successor to the N810, has phone capabilities and is not officially marketed as an Internet Tablet, but rather as an actual Nseries smartphone.
ADSL modems
[edit]- Nokia M10
- Nokia M11
- Nokia M1122
- Nokia MW1122
- Nokia M5112
- Nokia M5122
- Nokia Ni200[13]
- Nokia Ni500[14]
GPS products
[edit]- Nokia GPS module LAM-1 for 9210(i)/9290 Communicator
|
WLAN products
[edit]
|
|
Digital television
[edit]- Nokia DBox
- Nokia DBox2
- Nokia Mediamaster 9200 S
- Nokia Mediamaster 9500 S
- Nokia Mediamaster 9500 C
- Nokia Mediamaster 9600 S
- Nokia Mediamaster 9600 C
- Nokia Mediamaster 9610 S
- Nokia Mediamaster 9800 S
- Nokia Mediamaster 9850 T
- Nokia Mediamaster 9900 S
- Nokia Mediamaster 110 T
- Nokia Mediamaster 210 T
- Nokia Mediamaster 221 T
- Nokia Mediamaster 230 T
- Nokia Mediamaster 260 T
- Nokia Mediamaster 260 C
- Nokia Mediamaster 310 T
Military communications and equipment
[edit]Nokia developed the Sanomalaitejärjestelmä ("Message device system") for the Finnish Defence Forces. It includes:
- Sanomalaite M/90
- Partiosanomalaite
- Keskussanomalaite
For the Finnish Defence force, Nokia also manufactured:
- AN/PRC-77 portable combat-net radio transceiver (under licence, designated LV 217[18])
- M61 gas mask[19]
Telephone switches
[edit]Computers
[edit]Minicomputers
[edit]Nokia designed and manufactured a series of minicomputers starting in the 1970s. These included the Mikko series of minicomputers intended for use in the finance and banking industry, and the MPS-10 minicomputer (with an OS programmed in the Ada programming language[20]) which was widely used in major Finnish banks in the late 1980s.
Personal computers
[edit]In the 1980s, Nokia's personal computer division Nokia Data manufactured a series of personal computers by the name of MikroMikko. The MikroMikko series included the following products and product series.
| Name | CPU | Memory | Operating system | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mikromikko 1 | Intel 8085 | 64 KB | CP/M 2.2 | 1981 |
| Mikromikko 2 | Intel 80186 | 128-768 KB | Nokia MS-DOS | 1983 |
| Mikromikko 3 | Intel 80286 | 1–4 MB | MS-DOS 3.2, 5.0 | 1986–1990 |
| Mikromikko 4 | Intel 80386 | 2–64 MB | MS-DOS 3.3, 4.01, OS/2 | 1989–? |
Nokia's PC division was sold to the British computer company ICL in 1991. In 1990, Fujitsu had acquired 80% of ICL plc, which throughout the decade became wholly part of Fujitsu.[21] Personal computers and servers were marketed under the ICL brand; the Nokia MikroMikko line of compact desktop computers continued to be produced at the Kilo factories in Espoo, Finland. Components, including motherboards and Ethernet network adapters were manufactured locally, until production was moved to Taiwan. Internationally the MikroMikko line was marketed by Fujitsu as the ErgoPro.
In 1999, Fujitsu Siemens Computers was formed as a joint venture between Fujitsu Computers Europe and Siemens Computer Systems, wherein all of ICL's hardware business (except VME mainframes) was absorbed into the joint venture. On 1 April 2009, Fujitsu bought out Siemens' share of the joint venture, and Fujitsu Siemens Computers became Fujitsu Technology Solutions. Fujitsu continues to manufacture computers in Europe,[22] including PC mainboards developed and manufactured in-house.
Mini laptops
[edit]On 24 August 2009, Nokia announced that they will be re-entering the PC business with a high-end mini laptop called the Nokia Booklet 3G.[23] It was discontinued a few years later.
Computer displays
[edit]Nokia produced CRT and early TFT LCD Multigraph displays for PC and larger systems application. The Nokia Display Products' branded business was sold to ViewSonic in 2000.[24][25]
Others
[edit]During the 1990s, Nokia divested itself of the industries listed below to focus solely on telecommunications.[1]
- Aluminium
- Communications cables
- Capacitors
- Chemicals
- Electricity generation machinery
- Footwear (including Wellington boots)
- Military technology and equipment
- Paper products
- Personal computers
- Plastics
- Robotics
- Televisions
- Tires (car and bicycle)
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b "Nokia – Towards Telecommunications" (PDF). Nokia Corporation. August 2000. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 July 2009. Retrieved 27 August 2009.
- ^ "Nokia WiFi Beacon 1".
- ^ "Nokia WiFi Beacon 3".
- ^ "Nokia Smart TV 55 inch". Nokia. Retrieved 3 June 2020.
- ^ "Nokia 43-inch smart TV specs teased on Flipkart". The Hindustan Times Tech. 2 June 2020. Retrieved 3 June 2020.
- ^ Computer Networking and Telecommunications Research, University of Salford – GSM Mobiles – 2G
- ^ "Nokia ditches letters for all-number names". Archived from the original on 24 March 2025. Retrieved 1 June 2025.
- ^ "Form" (PDF). www.nokia.com. 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 June 2024. Retrieved 1 June 2025.
- ^ "Nokia 8800 announced". GSMArena.com. Retrieved 1 June 2025.
- ^ Out with the old, in with the new: T-Mobile EOLs Lumia 810, getting Lumia 521 April 24 | Windows Phone Central. Wpcentral.com (18 April 2013).
- ^ O'Brien, Chris (31 May 2018). "Withings cofounder Éric Carreel finalizes deal to regain control from Nokia". VentureBeat. Retrieved 23 October 2018.
- ^ "Nokia Licenses Remote Access Technology from Positive Networks". TMCnet.com. 2004. Retrieved 13 November 2006.
- ^ "Nokia ADSL – Fast Internet Made Easy". Archived from the original on 29 August 2006. Retrieved 1 October 2007.
- ^ "Nokia ADSL – Fast Internet Made Easy". Archived from the original on 29 August 2006. Retrieved 1 October 2007.
- ^ "User's Guide for the Nokia Wireless GPS Module (LD-1W)" (PDF). fcc.report.
- ^ "FORM 6-K - Report of Foreign Private Issuer - Nokia Corporation". Archived from the original on 18 April 2025.
- ^ "Way Finder". Nokia. Archived from the original on 7 April 2007. Retrieved 27 February 2019.
- ^ fi:LV 217
- ^ Garber, Megan (3 September 2013). "Remember When Nokia Also Made Paper, Galoshes, and Gas Masks?". The Atlantic. The Atlantic Monthly Group. Archived from the original on 4 September 2013. Retrieved 10 May 2025.
- ^ "Ada User Journal, Volume 31, #3" (PDF). Ada-Europe. September 2020.
- ^ "Historia: 1991–1999" (in Finnish). Fujitsu Services Oy, Finland. Archived from the original on 8 October 2008. Retrieved 22 September 2010.
- ^ "Fujitsu's New 'Made in Germany' Celsius Workstations and ESPRIMO PCs Showcase Reliability" (Press release). Fujitsu Technology Solutions. 3 June 2013.
- ^ "Nokia Booklet 3G brings all day mobility to the PC world" (Press release). Nokia Corporation. 24 August 2009. Retrieved 26 August 2009.
- ^ "ViewSonic Corporation Acquires Nokia Display Products' Branded Business" (Press release). Nokia Corporation. 17 January 2000. Archived from the original on 9 December 2008. Retrieved 22 March 2009.
- ^ Phones, Compare (31 August 2017). "Nokia 7.1 Review". Compare Phones. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
External links
[edit]- Nokia – Phone Software Update (archived 14 October 2006)
Nokia 282 photo: Nokia 282 (1998)
List of Nokia products
View on GrokipediaCurrent Products
Devices by Nokia Technologies
Nokia Technologies, established as an independent division following the 2016 acquisition of Alcatel-Lucent, concentrates on advanced research and development in imaging and audio technologies, leveraging a robust patent portfolio to innovate consumer hardware for personal and home use.[7][8] This focus has enabled the creation of licensed and directly developed products emphasizing seamless connectivity, immersive sound, and enhanced visual experiences, with over 20,000 patents in imaging and audio fields driving spatial and high-fidelity solutions.[9] A key offering from Nokia Technologies is its Beacon series of Wi-Fi routers, designed for mesh networking to provide whole-home coverage. The Beacon 1, an entry-level Wi-Fi 5 model, supports dual-band AC1200 speeds (300 Mbps on 2.4 GHz and 867 Mbps on 5 GHz) with 2x2 MIMO, covering up to 1,600 square feet per unit and integrating with the Nokia WiFi mobile app for setup, parental controls, and network optimization.[10] The Beacon 2 advances to Wi-Fi 6 with dual-band AX1800 capabilities, EasyMesh compatibility for expandable coverage up to 5,000 square feet across three units, and app-based features like guest networks and bandwidth prioritization.[11] Subsequent models include the Beacon 3.1, a tri-band Wi-Fi 6 router with 4x4 MIMO on 5 GHz (up to 2,402 Mbps), 2x2 on 2.4 GHz, and Gigabit Ethernet ports, offering coverage for homes up to 3,000 square feet and seamless app integration for device management.[12] The Beacon 6 provides tri-band AX4200 speeds with 4x4 MIMO across bands, 2.5 Gbps WAN/LAN ports, and 160 MHz channel support for up to 6,000 square feet in mesh setups.[13] Higher-end options like the Beacon 19, a Wi-Fi 7 tri-band gateway, deliver up to 19 Gbps aggregate Wi-Fi capacity with 4x4 MIMO, 10 Gbps and dual 1 Gbps LAN ports, and coverage exceeding 4,000 square feet via mesh extension.[14] The flagship Beacon 24, a quad-band Wi-Fi 7 model, achieves 24 Gbps Wi-Fi throughput, 10 Gbps WAN with dual 2.5 Gbps LAN ports, and advanced mesh for large homes up to 6,000 square feet, all managed through the intuitive Nokia WiFi app.[15] In digital audio, Nokia Technologies has implemented OZO Audio technology in various consumer devices, emphasizing spatial audio capture and playback for immersive experiences. OZO Audio employs intelligent processing with multiple microphones to record 3D soundscapes, enabling features like stereo widening and bass enhancement that simulate surround sound through standard headphones or speakers.[9] This technology supports real-time spatial audio rendering, reducing noise and preserving details such as whispers or environmental sounds, and is integrated into partnerships for headphones and speakers that deliver 360-degree audio without specialized hardware.[16] For instance, OZO Playback enhances mobile and home audio devices by broadening soundstages and optimizing for binaural listening, making it compatible with Nokia-branded apps on HMD Global devices for unified ecosystem playback.[17] Nokia Technologies also contributes to smart TV products through direct development and licensing of Android TV platforms, featuring models optimized for home entertainment. The Nokia Android Smart TV series includes sizes from 32 to 55 inches, with Full HD and UHD variants supporting 4K resolution at 60 fps, HDR10, and built-in streaming apps like Netflix and YouTube via Google Assistant integration.[18] Entry-level models like the 32HDADNVVEE offer 720p HD panels with 200 nits brightness and dual 8W speakers, while mid-range options such as the 43FHDADNVVEE provide 1080p displays with 300 nits and Dolby Audio support. Premium UHD models, including the 55UHDADNVVGE, feature 4K IPS panels with 400 nits brightness, 1200:1 contrast, and 20W speakers enhanced by OZO Audio for spatial sound.[19] As of 2025, Nokia Technologies has introduced updates integrating AI into home devices, such as AI-enhanced OZO Audio for real-time voice separation and immersive spatial audio in streaming boxes and speakers, improving clarity in noisy environments via the IVAS codec over 5G networks.[20] These advancements also include home automation features in Beacon routers, like AI-driven network optimization for smart home devices, enabling predictive bandwidth allocation and compatibility with voice assistants for seamless IoT control.[21]Network Equipment by Nokia
Nokia's network equipment portfolio centers on advanced telecommunications infrastructure designed for mobile operators, enterprises, and critical sectors, with a strong emphasis on 5G and emerging 6G technologies as of 2025. The company's offerings include scalable radio access networks, high-capacity optical and IP systems, and specialized solutions for secure communications, supporting global connectivity demands while prioritizing energy efficiency and sustainability.[22][23] A cornerstone of Nokia's mobile network solutions is the AirScale portfolio, which encompasses a comprehensive range of 5G and 6G base stations featuring advanced radio units and massive MIMO antennas. These components cover low-, mid-, and millimeter-wave spectrum bands, enabling efficient deployment for enhanced coverage and capacity in diverse environments. The AirScale Massive MIMO radios, including the compact Habrok series, support high-performance operations with reduced energy consumption through system-on-a-chip designs, facilitating widespread adoption by operators worldwide.[24][22][25] In fixed and cloud network domains, Nokia provides robust products such as the PSE-6s optical transport system, which delivers up to 1.2 Tb/s per wavelength using 130 Gbaud coherent optics, achieving up to 60% lower power usage compared to previous generations. Complementing this, the 7750 SR series of IP routers offers scalable capacity reaching 230 Tb/s full duplex, with native support for 800 GbE interfaces to handle high-bandwidth traffic in core and edge networks. These systems integrate seamlessly to support cloud-scale applications and deterministic packet forwarding.[26][27][28] Recent advancements in 2025 include Nokia's AI-RAN platform, developed in partnership with NVIDIA through a $1 billion investment to accelerate innovation in radio access networks. This collaboration integrates NVIDIA's GPU-accelerated computing with Nokia's infrastructure, enabling AI-driven edge computing for mission-critical applications and paving the way for 6G deployments with enhanced automation and efficiency. The platform supports real-time AI processing in base stations, targeting trials in 2026 for improved network orchestration.[29][30][31] For defense and public safety applications, Nokia offers the Mission-Safe Phone, a rugged smartphone engineered for tactical communications with MIL-STD-810H certification for shock, vibration, and extreme temperatures, alongside IP68 rating for dust and water resistance. Available in variants tailored for high-bandwidth missions, it features a 6.32-inch Gorilla Glass Victus 2 display, 4500 mAh battery with 1000-cycle longevity, and 5G connectivity for secure data exchange in harsh environments.[32][33][34] Nokia maintains a leading position in mobile networks, recognized as the top vendor for portfolio competitiveness in core networks and holding the most 5G Standalone Core deployments at 54 live networks by mid-2025. The company's equipment incorporates sustainability features, such as AI-optimized energy efficiency reducing costs and carbon footprint by up to 30%, alongside commitments to net-zero emissions by 2040 through low-power hardware and ReefShark chipsets that minimize material use. These integrations also provide backward compatibility with legacy telephone switches for ongoing support of existing infrastructures.[35][36][37][38]Mobile Devices by HMD Global
HMD Global, a Finnish company, acquired the license to design, manufacture, and sell Nokia-branded mobile phones in 2017, focusing on affordable, durable, and sustainable devices to revive the Nokia legacy in the consumer market. By 2025, HMD had released over 50 Nokia-branded models, emphasizing repairability, long battery life, and environmental responsibility, such as the use of recycled materials in select devices. This strategy targets emerging markets and budget-conscious users, with a portfolio spanning smartphones and feature phones available through global carriers and retailers. As of September 2025, the exclusive licensing agreement for Nokia-branded smartphones ends in March 2026, while the license for feature phones has been extended beyond 2026.[39][40] Flagship offerings include the Nokia XR21, launched in 2023, which features a Qualcomm Snapdragon 695 5G processor, a 6.49-inch FHD+ 120Hz IPS display, a 4800mAh battery supporting 33W fast charging, and a rugged design certified to MIL-STD-810H for drop and extreme condition resistance, along with IP69K water and dust protection. In 2023, a limited edition of the XR21 was produced in Europe, limited to 50 units with unique engravings and a Frosted Platinum finish, highlighting HMD's commitment to premium, collectible variants.[41] The device also includes a 64MP main camera with OIS and a 16MP front camera, prioritizing durability for outdoor and professional use.[42] Mid-range smartphones like the Nokia G42 5G, released in 2023, support 5G connectivity via a Snapdragon 480+ chipset, a 6.56-inch HD+ 90Hz display, and a 50MP triple camera system with HDR and night mode capabilities.[43] It offers up to three days of battery life from a 5000mAh removable battery and boasts high repairability, earning a perfect score from iFixit for user-replaceable components like the screen and battery.[44] Similarly, the Nokia G60 5G, introduced in 2022 but still available in 2025, uses a Snapdragon 695 5G processor, a 6.58-inch FHD+ 120Hz display, and a 50MP main camera, with 60% recycled plastic in its construction for sustainability.[45] Feature phones remain a core segment, with models like the Nokia 5310 (2024) featuring dedicated music keys, dual front speakers, FM radio, and a 1450mAh battery offering up to 30 days of standby time on 2G, powered by a Unisoc 6531F chipset.[46] The Nokia 230 (2024) emphasizes simplicity with a 2.8-inch QVGA display, 2MP rear and front cameras with LED flash, 4G connectivity, and up to 27 days of battery life, designed for basic calling, texting, and media playback.[47] The Nokia 150 (2023) provides essential 4G support, FM radio, a 0.3MP camera, and a 1450mAh battery lasting up to 19 days on standby, catering to users seeking reliable, low-cost connectivity without smartphone complexity.[48] Budget smartphones include the Nokia C32, equipped with a Unisoc SC9863A1 octa-core processor, a 6.5-inch HD+ 60Hz display, a 50MP dual rear camera, and a 5000mAh battery for up to three days of use, running Android 13 (Go edition) for optimized performance on entry-level hardware.[49] The Nokia C22, also on a Unisoc SC9863A1 chipset, shares a similar 6.5-inch display and 5000mAh battery but adds enhanced durability with a scratch-resistant glass front and up to two years of security updates.[50] These models prioritize affordability and longevity, with entry-level cameras suitable for everyday snapshots.[51] Sustainability is integrated across the lineup, notably in the Nokia X30 5G, which uses 100% recycled aluminum for its frame and 65% recycled plastic for the back cover, alongside FSC-certified packaging and extended software support for three years.[52] HMD's approach ensures these devices reduce environmental impact while maintaining Nokia's reputation for robust, accessible technology.Licensed Brand Products
Nokia licenses its brand to third-party manufacturers for a variety of consumer electronics, enabling the production of televisions, laptops, audio devices, and accessories that leverage the Nokia name in markets outside of mobile phones and direct Nokia-developed hardware. This strategy, expanded since 2019 to include home entertainment and computing categories, allows partners to utilize Nokia's brand equity while Nokia focuses on core telecommunications and technologies. As of 2025, these licensed products are available through official support channels and select retailers, with manufacturing handled by independent licensees such as RichGo Technology for audio items.[5][53] Nokia-branded televisions encompass smart TVs, QLED smart TVs, and models enhanced with premium audio from JBL or Onkyo, available in sizes ranging from 24 inches to 70 inches. These displays support resolutions up to 4K UHD, along with HD and Full HD options, and integrate Android TV operating systems for streaming and smart home functionality, including built-in Chromecast. Produced by licensees in partnership with e-commerce platforms like Flipkart for markets such as India, the TVs emphasize vibrant visuals and immersive sound tailored for home entertainment.[18][19][54] In the computing segment, Nokia-licensed laptops feature the PureBook lineup, including models like the PureBook X14, S14, Pro, Lite 14.1, and the innovative PureBook Fold. Equipped with Intel processors, these devices target productivity and educational use, offering lightweight designs, long battery life, and features such as high-resolution displays and Windows compatibility. The primary licensee, French startup OFF Global, launched these in 2022 but ceased operations in April 2025; production has ended, new units are no longer available, though the product line remains listed for support of existing devices globally.[55][56][57][58] Audio products under Nokia license include headphones and speakers from the Essential series, such as the Essential True Wireless Earphones E3100, Essential Earphones E2101A and E2102A, and various wireless speaker options. These devices provide Bluetooth 5.0 connectivity, hands-free calling, and playback durations up to 20 hours on select models, with some incorporating active noise cancellation for enhanced listening. Manufactured by partners like RichGo Technology (Shenzhen) Co. Ltd., the audio lineup draws on Nokia's heritage in sound technology, occasionally integrating advancements from Nokia Technologies for spatial audio experiences.[59][59] Accessories licensed under the Nokia brand consist of practical items like adapters, power banks, cables, and car accessories, designed for compatibility with Android and iOS ecosystems. These products focus on charging, connectivity, and vehicle integration, such as mounts and chargers, supporting everyday mobility needs without venturing into wearables like smartwatches. Support for these items is provided through Nokia's official channels, ensuring quality alignment with the brand's standards.[60]Past Products
Mobile Phones
Nokia's mobile phone division began producing devices in 1982 under the Mobira brand, initially focusing on bulky analog transportables for the Nordic Mobile Telephone (NMT) network. The Mobira Senator, launched in 1982, was a car-mounted phone weighing approximately 9.8 kg, marking Nokia's entry into mobile communications with 1G analog technology supporting voice calls over 450 MHz frequencies.[61] By 1984, the Mobira Talkman introduced a more portable option at around 5 kg, often cited as one of the world's first handheld-capable mobiles, though still requiring a separate battery pack and featuring limited talk time of about 60 minutes.[62] The series progressed to the Mobira Cityman in 1987, Nokia's first true handheld at 760 g with dimensions of 183 × 43 × 79 mm, operating on NMT-900 analog networks and offering up to 150 minutes of battery life—devices in this era typically exceeded 700 g and relied on analog signals prone to interference.[63] The Nokia Cityman 200, released in 1989, refined the design for business users with improved ergonomics while maintaining analog specs, setting the stage for digital transitions.[2] The 1990s marked Nokia's shift to digital GSM (2G) technology, with the original series from 1992 to 1999 emphasizing reliability and basic features like SMS. The Nokia 1011, launched in November 1992, was the company's first mass-produced GSM phone, supporting digital voice and data at 900 MHz with a monochrome display and up to 90 minutes of talk time, enabling seamless roaming across 14 European countries.[64] In 1994, the Nokia 2110 introduced the iconic Snake game as a pre-installed entertainment feature, alongside SMS capabilities and a customizable ringtone, achieving sales of over 20 million units and earning accolades as a top business phone.[4] The decade culminated with the Nokia 9000 Communicator in 1996, widely recognized as the first smartphone, featuring a clamshell design with a full QWERTY keyboard, PDA functions like email and fax via PC connectivity, and a 4.5-inch monochrome LCD running GEOS OS on a 24 MHz processor.[65] Entering the 2000s, Nokia's numeric series dominated with durable, user-friendly designs, producing over 100 models in three- and four-digit lines that prioritized battery life and ruggedness. The three-digit series, such as the Nokia 3310 released in 2000, gained fame for its "indestructible" polycarbonate build—capable of withstanding drops from 1.5 meters—and a 900 mAh battery offering up to 260 hours standby, making it a global bestseller with 126 million units sold.[4] Four-digit models like the Nokia 6230i in 2004 advanced multimedia, incorporating a 1.3 MP camera for VGA video recording up to 60 seconds, Bluetooth 1.1 for wireless transfers, EDGE data speeds up to 236.8 kbit/s, and an MMC slot for expandable storage in a compact 108 g body.[66] From 2005 to 2011, Nokia's lettered series—C for consumer, E for enterprise, N for multimedia, and X for experimental—introduced innovative form factors and Symbian OS, with the N series leading in high-end features. The Nokia N95 (2007) featured a groundbreaking dual-slide mechanism revealing a media keypad below the numeric keys, integrated GPS for navigation, a 5 MP Carl Zeiss camera with autofocus and video at 30 fps, and HSDPA connectivity up to 3.6 Mbit/s, earning praise as a multimedia powerhouse.[67] The E71 (2008), targeted at business users, included a stainless-steel QWERTY keyboard for efficient typing, Wi-Fi, 3G support, and email synchronization, weighing just 127 g and achieving over 10 million sales.[4] The X6 (2009) pioneered capacitive touchscreen technology in Nokia's lineup with a 3.2-inch display supporting 16.7 million colors, a 5 MP camera, and 32 GB internal storage, bridging feature phones and smartphones at an affordable price point. In the final years from 2011 to 2014, Nokia grappled with smartphone competition through late Symbian updates, budget Asha feature phones, and the Windows Phone-based Lumia line, before selling its mobile division to Microsoft. The Nokia 808 PureView (2012) showcased Symbian's swan song with a 41 MP sensor using pixel oversampling for lossless zoom up to 3x, Carl Zeiss optics, and 1080p video, setting benchmarks in mobile imaging despite its 169 g weight.[68] The Asha 501 (2013), a low-cost touch feature phone, featured a 3-inch capacitive screen, Series 40 OS with cloud apps like Facebook, and dual-SIM support in a 93.6 g plastic body aimed at emerging markets. The Lumia 920 (2012) introduced PureView stabilization to Windows Phone 8 with an 8.7 MP sensor and floating lens for optical image stabilization, 4.5-inch AMOLED display, and wireless charging, marking Nokia's pivot to Microsoft's ecosystem.[69] Overall, Nokia developed over 300 mobile phone models from 1982 to 2014, peaking at more than 40% global market share in 2007 with 436.6 million units shipped that year alone.[70] This era ended with the April 2014 sale of Nokia's Devices and Services business to Microsoft for €5.44 billion, transitioning the Lumia line under new ownership.[71] Nokia's legacy, including the Snake game debuted on the 2110, continues to influence HMD Global's licensed designs, which incorporate nostalgic elements like updated Snake variants in modern feature phones.[72] Notable additional past products include the Nokia DX 200 digital switch (introduced 1985), used in early ISDN networks.Tablets and Portable Devices
Nokia's foray into tablets and portable devices began in the mid-2000s with the launch of its Internet Tablet series, which emphasized Wi-Fi connectivity and touch-based interfaces running on the Linux-based Maemo operating system. The Nokia 770 Internet Tablet, introduced in 2005, was the first in this lineup, featuring a 4.1-inch high-resolution touchscreen (800x480 pixels) supporting up to 65,536 colors, a Texas Instruments OMAP 1710 processor at 252 MHz, 64 MB of RAM, and 128 MB of internal flash storage expandable via RS-MMC cards.[73] Weighing 230 grams with its protective cover, the device lacked cellular capabilities and focused on web browsing, multimedia playback, and basic productivity, powered by a rechargeable battery offering up to 4 hours of Wi-Fi usage.[74] Subsequent models built on this foundation, evolving the platform toward MeeGo, a collaboration with Intel that merged Maemo with Moblin. The Nokia N800, released in 2007, upgraded to a Texas Instruments OMAP 2420 processor at 330 MHz, added a VGA webcam for video calls, and included USB and miniSD ports for enhanced connectivity, while retaining the 4.1-inch display and introducing slide-out navigation. The Nokia N810 followed in 2008, incorporating a full QWERTY keyboard, integrated GPS for location-based services, and a slightly faster 400 MHz OMAP 2420 variant, with 128 MB RAM and 2 GB internal storage, alongside a 1500 mAh battery supporting up to 3 hours of Wi-Fi browsing.[75] These devices, priced around 500 at launch, targeted mobile internet users but faced competition from emerging smartphones, leading to limited adoption before Nokia shifted away from MeeGo development in favor of other platforms by 2014.[76] In 2014, following the sale of its mobile phone business to Microsoft, Nokia Technologies re-entered the tablet market with the Android-based Nokia N1, marking a pivot from proprietary Linux systems to Google's ecosystem. Announced in November 2014, the N1 featured a 7.9-inch IPS LCD display with a 2048x1536 resolution (324 ppi) in a 4:3 aspect ratio, powered by a 64-bit quad-core Intel Atom Z3580 processor at 2.4 GHz, 2 GB of RAM, and 32 GB of internal storage.[77] It included an 8-megapixel rear camera, 5-megapixel front camera, and a 5300 mAh battery offering up to 15 hours of video playback, with a premium aluminum unibody design and USB-C charging.[78] Primarily launched in China and select Asian markets at around $250, the N1 represented Nokia's brief return to consumer portables but did not expand globally due to licensing constraints from the Microsoft deal.[79] Post-2014, Nokia Technologies explored virtual reality hardware, launching the OZO professional VR camera in 2015 as part of a strategic focus on immersive technologies after divesting its mobile division. The handheld OZO featured eight synchronized 2K cameras with 195-degree fisheye lenses for 360-degree spherical video capture at up to 30 frames per second, complemented by eight spatial microphones for immersive 3D audio.[80] Targeted at Hollywood filmmakers and content creators, it included onboard processing for real-time stitching and was priced at $60,000 initially, later reduced to $45,000; notable uses included production for films like The Martian.[81] An upgraded OZO Plus model in 2016 added liquid-cooled sensors for extended recording. However, slower-than-expected VR market growth prompted Nokia to discontinue the line in 2017, shifting resources to other ventures.[82] Nokia also ventured into health wearables through its 2016 acquisition of Withings for €170 million, rebranding the lineup under Nokia Health from 2017 to 2018. This portfolio included smart scales like the Nokia Body+ for body composition analysis (weight, body fat, muscle mass via Wi-Fi sync to the Health Mate app) and activity trackers such as the Nokia Go, which monitored steps, heart rate, and sleep with Bluetooth integration.[83] The Body Cardio scale, for example, used Wi-Fi and app connectivity for vascular age and ECG-like metrics, while all devices emphasized data privacy and cross-platform compatibility with iOS and Android. Nokia sold the division back to Withings' founder in 2018 for an undisclosed sum, ending its direct involvement in consumer health portables.[84]Computing Devices
Nokia's involvement in computing began in the late 1960s with the establishment of a data processing division focused on industrial automation and communications systems.[85] By the 1970s, the company developed the Mikko series of minicomputers, which featured 16-bit architecture and were primarily used in telecommunications and industrial applications.[86] These systems, such as the Mikko 3/16 introduced around 1980, incorporated multiprocessor designs with high-speed central processors and supported tape storage for data handling, reflecting the era's emphasis on reliable, modular computing for specialized tasks.[86] In the 1980s, Nokia expanded into personal computers through its Nokia Data division, launching the MikroMikko line in 1981 to target business users with ergonomic designs.[85] Early models like the MikroMikko 1 used an Intel 8085 processor at 2-3 MHz, with 64 KB RAM, 4 KB EPROM, and options for one or two 5.25-inch floppy drives, running CP/M or similar operating systems.[87] Later iterations, such as the MikroMikko 3 from the mid-1980s, became IBM PC-compatible, featuring Intel 80286 or 80386 processors (up to 33 MHz), 4 MB RAM, 40 MB hard disks, and support for MS-DOS, enabling broader compatibility with standard software.[88] Nokia's entry into the PC market was bolstered by the 1985 acquisition of Luxor AB, a Swedish electronics and computer manufacturer, which integrated Luxor's expertise into Nokia's offerings and helped achieve significant penetration in the Nordic region.[85] By the 1990s, Nokia shifted toward portable computing hybrids, exemplified by the Nokia 9000il Communicator released in 1998 as part of the Book series evolution.[89] This device combined PDA functionality with phone capabilities, powered by a 24 MHz Intel i386 processor, 8 MB memory (divided for applications, programs, and data), and GEOS operating system, allowing email, web browsing, and word processing in a clamshell design with QWERTY keyboard.[90] It represented Nokia's attempt to blend mobile communication with PC-like productivity for professionals.[91] Nokia's computing efforts peaked in the Finnish market during the 1980s and early 1990s, where the MikroMikko series captured a notable share amid growing demand for localized business systems.[85] However, by 1991, facing intense global competition, Nokia sold its Nokia Data division—including the MikroMikko line—to International Computers Limited (ICL), a Fujitsu subsidiary, for approximately £230 million to refocus on telecommunications.[92] This divestiture marked the end of Nokia's direct involvement in general-purpose computing hardware, though elements of its portable innovations later influenced internet tablet developments.[93]Networking and Communication Equipment
Nokia's discontinued networking and communication equipment from the 1990s to the 2010s encompassed consumer-oriented broadband access devices, wireless positioning tools, local area network hardware, digital broadcast receivers, and legacy telephony platforms. These products targeted both home users and early enterprise needs, reflecting Nokia's diversification beyond mobile phones into connectivity solutions during an era of rapid internet and digital media adoption. By the late 2000s, Nokia began phasing out much of its consumer networking portfolio to refocus on professional telecom infrastructure, culminating in the sale of its wireless modem operations in 2010.[94] In the broadband domain, Nokia developed ADSL routers for home and small office internet access in the early 2000s, supporting DSL connections over existing telephone lines to enable speeds up to several Mbps. Representative models included Ethernet-enabled gateways designed for easy integration with PCs via USB or wired ports, though specific consumer lines were discontinued around 2002 as competition intensified and Nokia shifted priorities. These devices contributed to Nokia's early presence in residential broadband, but lacked advanced VDSL extensions in their consumer iterations. Nokia's GPS offerings in the 2000s integrated positioning technology into mobile accessories for navigation and location-based services. The company released the Xpress-on GPS shell for the Nokia 5140 phone in 2003, a rugged add-on that transformed the device into a portable GPS navigator for outdoor activities like hiking or push-to-talk communications. Complementing this, the Nokia LD-1W Wireless GPS Module, launched around 2005, was a compact Bluetooth-enabled receiver compatible with Series 60 phones and PDAs, providing standalone satellite signal acquisition for mapping applications with up to several hours of battery life. These products emphasized seamless integration with Nokia's ecosystem but were discontinued as smartphone GPS became standard.[95][96][97] For wireless local area networks, Nokia entered the market in the early 2000s with 802.11b-compliant hardware, capitalizing on the emerging Wi-Fi standard for 11 Mbps data rates in the 2.4 GHz band. In March 2001, Nokia announced a full product line including PC cards for laptops and access points for home or office hotspots, all using direct-sequence spread spectrum technology for reliable connectivity. These compact, roam-capable devices supported ad-hoc and infrastructure modes, enabling wireless internet access without cabling, and were distributed through partners like TESSCO Technologies for broader availability. The lineup represented Nokia's push into untethered computing but was phased out by the mid-2000s amid faster 802.11g adoption.[98] Nokia's digital television equipment focused on set-top boxes for terrestrial and satellite broadcasting in the late 1990s and early 2000s, supporting the transition to digital signals. The MediaMaster series, such as the 9850T model released around 1999, was designed for the UK's ONdigital service, featuring DVB-T compliance for free-to-view channels, a built-in modem for interactive features, and Common Interface slots for pay-per-view decryption. This box connected via SCART or RF to standard TVs, handling MPEG-2 decoding for SD content and enabling subscription-based access to dozens of channels. Nokia also explored IPTV prototypes during this period, leveraging IP networks for video delivery, though these remained limited to trials. Production of consumer set-top boxes ended by the mid-2000s as integrated digital TVs proliferated.[99][100] On the telephony side, Nokia's DX 200 platform served as a cornerstone for digital switching from the 1980s through the 2010s, powering private automatic branch exchanges (PABXs) and public networks with capacities exceeding 1,000 lines. This modular, fault-tolerant system used distributed processing for voice, data, and signaling traffic, supporting ISDN and early VoIP integrations in rack-mounted configurations for enterprise and carrier use. It enabled scalable call routing with high availability, often deployed in military and government communications for secure, resilient setups, though Nokia discontinued legacy consumer variants by 2010 to emphasize next-generation IP-based switches.[101][102]Other Devices
Nokia produced a range of computer displays during the 1990s and 2000s, primarily CRT monitors targeted at professional and consumer markets in Europe. These included models like the Nokia 447ZA Plus, a 17-inch CRT monitor released around 2000 with built-in speakers, a microphone, and a high horizontal scan rate of 86 kHz for enhanced multimedia capabilities.[103] Another example was the Nokia Autosync 447E, a 16-inch CRT from 1996 supporting resolutions up to 1280 x 1024 via VGA input, designed for reliable performance in office environments.[104] The Nokia 447L series, also 17-inch CRTs, emphasized compact design and high-resolution output suitable for the era's computing needs.[105] These displays were largely discontinued by the mid-2000s as Nokia shifted focus away from consumer PC peripherals toward mobile and networking technologies. In the early 2000s, Nokia developed security hardware appliances as part of its IP Security Platforms lineup, aimed at enterprise network protection. The Nokia IP390, introduced around 2005, was a compact firewall and VPN appliance featuring 3 Gbps firewall throughput and 500 Mbps VPN performance, equipped with 1 GB RAM, an 80 GB hard drive, and a 1.496 GHz CPU for handling medium to large business networks.[106][107] It integrated Check Point VPN-1 software for secure remote access and perimeter defense, supporting features like intrusion prevention and traffic management.[108] By 2008, Nokia began pivoting from hardware-centric security to software solutions, selling its appliances business to a financial investor and ceasing further development of physical devices like the IP390.[109] Nokia also created several discontinued operating systems for its mobile devices, with Symbian serving as the cornerstone for smartphones from 1998 to 2014. Initially developed by Symbian Ltd. (a consortium including Nokia), the OS evolved through versions like S60, which debuted in 2002 on devices such as the Nokia 7650 and became the dominant UI platform for Symbian-based phones.[110] Subsequent iterations included S60 5th Edition in 2009 for touchscreens and Symbian^3 in 2010, culminating in the Belle release in 2011 that added NFC support and improved multitasking. At its peak around 2010, Symbian powered over 500 million devices worldwide, holding a significant share of the global smartphone market until Android's rise.[111] For feature phones, Nokia used the Series 30 and Series 40 platforms; Series 30, a basic RTOS from the late 1990s, supported entry-level devices with simple menus and messaging, while Series 40, launched in 2002, added Java apps and color screens for mid-range models like the Nokia 515.[112] Both were discontinued by 2014, with the last Series 40 phones released in 2013 and Microsoft phasing out support amid Nokia's acquisition.[113] Beyond commercial products, Nokia manufactured military equipment in the 1980s for Finland's defense forces, including communication devices like the Sanomalaite M/90 field communicator introduced in 1983. This portable radio-based system enabled secure messaging and coordination in tactical environments, reflecting Nokia's early expertise in radio technologies acquired through its expansion into defense sectors.[114] Production of such hardware ceased as Nokia divested non-core military divisions by the 1990s to focus on civilian telecommunications.Services
Current Services
Nokia's current services in 2025 emphasize enterprise and operator solutions, focusing on cloud-native technologies, AI-driven analytics, and programmable networks to support 5G and emerging 6G ecosystems. These offerings primarily target communications service providers (CSPs) and enterprises, enabling scalable infrastructure for advanced connectivity and data management.[115] A cornerstone of Nokia's cloud and network services is the Nokia Cloud Core, a cloud-native 5G core platform that facilitates network slicing for customized, isolated virtual networks tailored to specific use cases such as enhanced mobile broadband or ultra-reliable low-latency communications. This service supports dynamic allocation of resources across multi-tenant environments, allowing operators to monetize 5G capabilities efficiently. Complementing this, the AVA platform provides AI-powered analytics for telecom operations, including the AVA NWDAF (Network Data Analytics Function), which collects 5G data to deliver insights on network performance, user behavior, and predictive maintenance, enabling closed-loop automation compliant with 3GPP standards. In Q3 2025, Nokia's Cloud and Network Services segment reported 13% net sales growth, driven by sustained investments in 5G core deployments.[116][117][115] For developer tools, Nokia offers the Network as Code platform, which includes standardized APIs and a developer portal to accelerate 5G and 6G application development. These APIs enable real-time interaction with network functions, such as edge computing for low-latency applications in industries like manufacturing and autonomous vehicles. Developers can access exposure functionalities through the Network Exposure Platform, supporting GSMA-compliant interfaces for integrating advanced services like quality-on-demand or location-based APIs. This programmable approach allows CSPs to create new revenue streams by exposing network capabilities to third-party apps.[118][119] In humanitarian initiatives, Nokia maintains ongoing support through the Saving Lives program, which deploys innovative communications solutions like drone-based networks and real-time applications for disaster response, focusing on rapid connectivity restoration in crisis zones. In 2025, the company shifted emphasis toward long-term resilience building, partnering with organizations to enhance digital infrastructure in vulnerable communities rather than solely immediate relief efforts. Additionally, Nokia contributes to global connectivity goals via its social impact programs, including collaborations with the United Nations to promote inclusive access in refugee and displacement scenarios.[120][121] Nokia's websites and platforms include dedicated support portals on Nokia.com, providing resources for enterprise customers such as technical documentation, troubleshooting tools, and software updates for network equipment integration. Bell Labs, Nokia's research arm, publishes ongoing research on topics like AI for 6G and sustainable networking, accessible via open-access platforms to foster industry innovation. Key expansions in 2025 include a partnership with NVIDIA to develop an AI platform for 6G, aiming to power advanced services for billions of connections in areas like robotics and smart cities; in November 2025, Nokia collaborated with Rohde & Schwarz to develop an AI-powered 6G receiver proof-of-concept, aimed at reducing costs and accelerating time-to-market for future networks.[30][122] Nokia's 5G Standalone core serves 127 CSP customers worldwide, with 55 having launched live services as of Q3 2025, underscoring its global reach across 130+ operators. These services integrate seamlessly with Nokia's network equipment to deliver end-to-end 5G and beyond solutions.[123][35]Discontinued Services
Nokia's discontinued services primarily encompassed consumer-focused digital offerings from the late 2000s and early 2010s, many of which were phased out amid the company's pivot away from mobile devices following the 2014 sale of its Devices and Services business to Microsoft for $7.2 billion.[70] This transaction transferred numerous apps and platforms to Microsoft, leading to further integrations, rebrands, or closures.[124] The Ovi ecosystem, introduced in 2008 and rebranded internally in 2009 to unify Nokia's online services, represented a key effort to compete in mobile content delivery but ultimately faded as market dynamics shifted toward Android and iOS ecosystems.[125] Among consumer services, the Ovi Store served as Nokia's primary app marketplace starting in May 2009, offering applications, games, and media for Symbian devices with targeted recommendations based on user connections.[126] It peaked at approximately 3 million daily downloads by November 2010, supported by over 400,000 developers and 92 apps exceeding 1 million downloads each.[127] However, plagued by technical issues at launch and slower adoption compared to rivals like Apple's App Store, the Ovi brand was fully discontinued in May 2011, with the store rebranded as Nokia Store before ceasing operations entirely by 2015.[128] Nokia Music, originally launched as a DRM-free streaming and download service in 2008 under the Comes With Music subscription bundled with select devices, evolved into part of the Ovi platform before being rebranded as MixRadio in 2013.[129] It was discontinued for Nokia users in April 2015 alongside the shutdown of Nokia Account services, though the underlying technology continued briefly under Microsoft and later Line before full closure in 2016.[130] In imaging and navigation, Nokia Camera—featuring advanced PureView imaging tools like manual controls and RAW support—was introduced in 2012 for Lumia Windows Phone devices to leverage Nokia's camera hardware expertise.[131] The app was abruptly removed from the Windows Phone Store in November 2014, rendering it unavailable for new downloads as Microsoft streamlined its ecosystem post-acquisition.[132] Similarly, HERE Maps, Nokia's flagship navigation app launched in 2013 with robust offline GPS functionality allowing full map downloads for over 100 countries, provided turn-by-turn directions without data connectivity—a key differentiator from competitors.[133] Nokia sold the HERE business in December 2015 to a consortium of Audi, BMW, and Daimler for about $3.1 billion, ending its direct control over the service and leading to the discontinuation of the Nokia-branded version.[134] Desktop and developer tools saw the end of Nokia PC Suite, a synchronization software suite introduced in the early 2000s for managing contacts, messages, and media transfers between Nokia phones and Windows PCs via USB or Bluetooth.[135] It was phased out around 2014, replaced briefly by Nokia Suite (formerly Ovi Suite) before both were deprecated amid the Microsoft transition.[136] The Qt framework, a cross-platform C++ library for GUI and application development that Nokia acquired in 2008 and maintained as open source under LGPL, saw its commercial licensing and stewardship transferred to Digia in August 2012 as Nokia refocused resources.[137] This move ensured Qt's continued open-source availability but marked Nokia's exit from direct involvement. Nokia's foray into video gaming culminated with the N-Gage platform, initially a hybrid phone-console in 2003 that sold about 3 million units despite ergonomic criticisms, and later reimagined as a software service in 2007 for S60 devices.[138] The N-Gage 2.0 service supported multiplayer gaming and digital distribution, hosting over 50 titles including adaptations of popular franchises like FIFA and Asphalt.[139] It was discontinued in September 2010, with game purchases halted that month and community features like N-Gage Arena shut down, reflecting declining interest in proprietary mobile gaming ecosystems.[139]References
- https://lpcwiki.miraheze.org/wiki/Series_40
- https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/History_of_video_games/Platforms/N-Gage