📞 Communicate in Style – Where Elegance Meets Functionality!
The Nokia 9300 Communicator is an unlocked GSM smartphone that combines a sleek design with powerful features, including a full QWERTY keyboard, vibrant 4-inch LCD display, and superior voice functionality, making it the perfect device for professionals on the go.
Display | LCD |
Screen Size | 4 Inches |
Average Battery Life Talk Time | 6 Hours |
Connectivity Technology | Bluetooth, USB |
Wireless Network Technology | GSM |
Cellular Technology | GSM |
Wireless Provider | Unlocked |
Battery Type | Lithium-Ion |
Camera Description | Front |
Human-Interface Input | Keyboard |
Water Resistance Level | Not Water Resistant |
SIM Card Slot Count | Single SIM |
Form Factor | Smartphone |
Biometric Security Feature | Face Recognition |
Operating System | nokia_symbian |
Memory Storage Capacity | 80 GB |
D**N
Shame on you
Still can not say that I believe that this could also happen. continuous market from Amazon but I become played out and that novices will think once again whether it will buy anything from you.for this Nokia have written that is new, what is not exactly the same is used and what is most horrifying is not working which means that it is unusable. just wonder do you really think that you will pass just like this?
K**A
Pleasant suprise!
It is a little old school at first glance. Then you open it and it is like WOW! The keys are not tiny whch works well with nails. It is a little heavier than what I am use to, but well worth it. Reception is great, Over all, I am very pleased!
R**E
i love it
love it so much. ♡♡♡♡♡♡
V**T
Its is business phone
Nokia 9300 instrument is very good quality. The phone is usefull especially for the business people. It has an excellent speaker. The most I liked in this phone is 5 people conference at a time. But the battery talk time is very less.
H**H
fantastic business phone
I gave a review on the other unlocked Nokia 9300 entry, which was for the North American version, and I have copied that review here below. I would add these notes, though; the product here is for an unlocked Eurasian Nokia 9300, which has the 900 MHz band instead of the 850 MHz band. This means that if you are a US customer, and want to have the ability to roam on all of AT&T's network, this is not the phone for you. If you are a US customer who only needs to use T-Mobile and roam on AT&T in 1900 MHz areas only, then you probably won't mind this phone, and may even like it alot. If you are an international customer, then this IS the phone for you, without a doubt. The OS and features should be the same with the Eurasian version as they are with the North American version. I own a North American version with the 850 MHz band, so most of the review is still applicable.v...My Original Review...vI previously owned a T-Mobile Dash by HTC, which worked well and I liked it. After crunching that one by accident, I decided to get an unlocked phone that seemed a bit more beefy. I don't like Blackberries, so I decided to try the Nokia 9300. It was discontinued by a couple years, but I still managed to find a brand new in the box North American version for a strongly discounted price. I had an old Nokia bar phone a few years back, and that thing still works today, so the reliability is great for Nokia's based on that experience.The 9300 is honestly the best phone I have ever owned. I have had it for five months now, and the Symbian 7.0 series 80 OS has never crashed, not even once, the entire time I have owned it; my Dash's Windows Mobile 6.0 OS used to crash every week, at least once a week. The Dash could not take a call while working in a spreadsheet without freezing, but the 9300 seems to manage just fine. The spacious 80 MB internal memory also seems to stand the Nokia in good stead.My Dash had a 1.3 Mpixel camera with video, and the Nokia has no camera. This may seem like a drawback, but I honestly don't care; I never cared for cameras in phones to begin with. The Dash has a full QWERTY keyboard crammed onto its lower front, while the 9300 has a gigantic inner keyboard that is more akin to a miniature laptop! I love the keyboard on the 9300, and I doubt any other phone has such a one, except possibly the 9500...My T-Mobile service is decent, the customer service is outstanding, and I hardly ever drop calls. When I had Cingular/AT&T back in the day, my coverage was wider but I dropped so many calls that I couldn't really carry a long conversation. I prefer the stability of T-Mobile calls to the wider coverage area of AT&T. T-Mobile was also willing to accept my unlocked phone on my service plan without extending my contract, and they do not require a contract if you provide your own unlocked phone; AT&T requires you to enter an 18-month restriction even if you provide your own unlocked phone. Also, T-Mobile's EDGE network is nearly three times faster in these parts than AT&T's. I get almost 250 kbits/sec on T-Mo's EDGE, while AT&T's only got 100 kbits/sec tops in practice. Also, the tethered modem capability is available with T-Mo's 19.99 data plan, while AT&T will not include it unless you spend 65.00/mo on data alone. So, I like T-Mobile for my 9300, and it works great...One funny thing about the 9300 is that there is no vibrating alert, but since I sit and type on it in meetings, I actually prefer not to have vibrating alert. So it works out for me in a funny way. It is as if somebody made this phone just for me. It does great on everything. Adobe Reader for Symbian does make a few errors on displaying pdf's once in a while, but everything else... email, internet, phone as modem, voice calls, display, calendar and alarm functions, applications, speakerphone, conference calls... everything else works beautifully. The phone and the OS are not totally seamless, though; I think the phone and OS are not nearly as integrated as they were on my Windows Mobile smartphone, but I actually prefer them to be somewhat seperate. Once again, somebody must have been thinking of me...The fact that this phone takes an MMC card instead of SD, miniSD or microSD was a little wierd, but I got a decent MMC card to go with it. It will take up to a 2 GB MMC or MMC-Plus card, and since MMC cards will fit into SD readers, I have had no problems. A nice touch is that the MMC slot allows for hot swapping.This phone has handily survived a couple of drops since I got it, and does not have any scratches, dents, marks, cracks, or otherwise as a result. It has stood up to some nasty situations; getting rained on, sitting out in a hot car, falling onto a wooden floor, being attacked by my cat... It takes a lick and keeps on ticking!Once again, a great phone by Nokia. The nicest and best phone I have ever owned thus far...
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