Sony Ericsson T610 Camera Phone Review
by Todd Ogasawara12/11/2003
Sony Ericsson calls the T610 camera phone an image and entertainment phone instead of a smartphone. They reserve the smartphone designation for the higher-end and higher-priced, PDA (Personal Digital Assistant)-like P800 and P900 series. The T610 is, however, a very capable and relatively tiny Bluetooth-enabled GSM/GPRS wireless phone.
The T610 is not based on Linux, the Microsoft Smartphone, Palm OS, or Symbian OS platforms. Nor does it have the larger storage memory (4 to 16MB RAM) associated with phones typically categorized as smartphones. Instead, it is based on the proprietary Sony Ericsson OS. And it can run applications written in Java.
This Sony phone has a 65536-color screen, 2MB of internal RAM, a built-in camera capable of taking small still photos, a WAP/XHTML browser, and support for both infrared and Bluetooth personal-area wireless communications.
Voice Features
The T610 does not present many surprises in its core function: serving as a wireless telephone. Its speaker volume is sufficient for most conditions. Pressing the left soft button when viewing the main screen takes you to a call list with easily interpreted icons that represent incoming, outgoing, and missed calls. Pressing the right soft button takes you to a menu to let you quickly toggle ring tones, Bluetooth, and infrared. The same menu also lets you create a quick note in the notepad.
The only major phone feature shortcoming is the lack of a speakerphone.
Hardware Information and End-User Features
| Sony Ericsson T610 Specifications | |
| Wireless Capabilities | GSM (Tri-band 900/1800/1900MHz) GPRS Infrared Bluetooth |
| Size & Weight | 4.09 by 2.17 by 0.75 inches (102 by 44 by 19mm) 3.35 ounces (95 grams) |
| Screen | STN 65536 colors 128 by 160 pixels 1.38 by 1.63 inches |
| Audio | Speaker/Microphone Headset Jack |
| Camera: Still | 352 by 288 maximum image size Fixed lens No flash 10 to 31KB observed typical still-image file size |
| Camera: Video | NA |
| Memory | 2MB internal RAM |
| Power | 315 hours standby 14 hours of talk time 4 hour charge time for lithium-ion battery |
An Ounce or Two Makes a Big Difference
The Denso Touchpoint 2200 shown to the left of the Sony Ericsson T610 in Figure 1 below weighs 4.5 ounces and is 4.8 inches long, 2 inches wide, and 0.8 inches thick. The Siemens SX56 Pocket PC Phone Edition to the right of the T610 weighs 5.9 ounces. The T610 weighs a mere 3.35 ounces. You might not think that an ounce or two would make much of a difference; however, the low weight and small size of the T610 lets you slip the phone into a pants or shirt pocket much more comfortably than even only slightly larger phones.
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| Figure 1. Denso Touchpoint 2200, Sony Ericsson T610, and Siemens SX56 Pocket PC Phone Edition |
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| Figure 2. Sony Ericsson T610 exposed back |
The Physical Shell
Despite its light weight, the T610 feels very solid and sturdy. The battery cover of some phones feel like they might slip off by accident. The T610's battery cover, in contrast, was actually very difficult for me to remove.
The keypad keys are unlit when the phone is idle. However, they become brightly lit and easy to see in the dark when the phone is active. I found that pressing the right soft-key activates the key lights when the phone is idle. They keys are relatively small and stiff. However, the small key size did not cause much problem for my relatively large fingers. I found that the keys were often accidentally depressed while in my pocket. This prompted me to turn on the Auto Keylock feature that locks the keypad when the phone is idle. You can unlock the phone by pressing the right softkey and then the asterisk (*) button on the keypad.
Battery Life
The T610 is rated at 315 standby hours and 14 hours of talk time. After using the evaluation unit for three weeks, I tend to believe this claim. The battery charge did not seem to drop more than 20 percent or so on days of heavy voice, GPRS (data), and Bluetooth usage. This included one-hour sessions of web surfing from a Pocket PC accessing the phone's GPRS data communications feature over a wireless Bluetooth link. I used the phone for two- or three-day stretches without recharging the battery. With normal usage, the battery did not drop below the 50 percent level.
Color Display
The T610 has 128 by 160 pixel 65536 color screen. It appears clear and bright in indoor or darkened settings. However, the SuperTwisted Nematic (STN) passive-matrix LCD is difficult to see outdoors in bright sunlight. The upcoming T630 model uses a Thin Film Transistor (TFT) active-matrix LCD screen that should be much easier to read in bright sunlight.
The Camera
The T610's 352 by 288 camera resolution (101,376 pixels) is one-third of the typical 640 by 480 (307,200 pixels) VGA resolution found in some other camera phones or PDA add-on CompactFlash or Secure Digital card cameras. However, you can see in photo examples 1 and 2 that photographs taken by a T610 produce reasonably satisfying results.
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| Photo 1. Full-size (288 by 352 pixels) close-up photographed using a T610. |
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| Photo 2. Full-size (352 by 288 pixels) photograph taken near sunset |
You can find other photographs taken by the T610 compared to other camera phones and PDA add-on cameras on an on-going comparison article on my personal web site: Comparison of other Pocket PC add-on cameras and camera phones.
The major problem for those use want to take a lot of photographs with the T610 is the relatively small 2MB RAM storage space and the lack of a storage-card facility like the MMC storage-card option for the Nokia 3650 camera phone. The T610 ran out of storage space after taking 16 photos. Another issue arises from the T610's file-naming scheme. The T610 reuses file names after a photo file is deleted. This can lead to accidentally overwriting files when copying the files to a desktop, notebook, or PDA. Other camera phones, like the Nokia 3650, use an ascension number file-naming scheme that prevents this problem.
Bluetooth Makes the T610 a Great PDA or Notebook PC Accessory
The T610 Bluetooth was very easy to configure to work with a Pocket PC (an HP iPAQ 2215 with a built-in Bluetooth radio) and two notebook PCs (one running Windows 2000 Professional and the other running Windows XP Home Edition). I used the same Belkin Bluetooth USB Adapter with both notebook PCs.
The T610 makes a near perfect accessory for a Bluetooth-enabled Pocket PC or desktop PC. I used this combination extensively during the evaluation period for:
- Reading and sending email from my Pocket PC.
- Surfing the Web from my Pocket PC.
- Transferring digital photographs from the phone to the Pocket PC.
- Dialing the phone from the Pocket PC's Pocket Outlook Contacts.
You can see a file transfer in progress in Figure 3.
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| Figure 3. Copying a file from the T610 to an HP iPAQ 2215 Pocket PC |
Figure 4 shows the Pocket PC browsing a web page by using the T610 as a wireless modem. This is done by configuring the Pocket PC Bluetooth dial-up settings. The only piece of information I needed to use it with T-Mobile USA was T-Mobile's special GPRS phone number (*99#). This, of course, assumes that you subscribe to your wireless phone service provider's voice (GSM in my case) and data (GPRS in my case) services, which are generally offered as separate services. The Pocket PC's higher pixel density (76,800 vs. 20,480) lets you see more of a web page while still having the advantage of instant-on and ultra-portability. If you focus your browsing on sites formatted for Palm OS or Pocket PC devices, you can eliminate horizontal scrolling.
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| Figure 4. Pocket PC using Bluetooth to connect to the T610 and using it as a wireless GPRS modem |
Adding Software
A brief check of online mobile software retailer Handango showed that a number of interesting games, utilities, and applications are available for the T610. The T610 section of the Sony Ericsson Fun & Downloads site provides a source of wallpapers, ring tones, games, and themes. The Sony Ericsson Applications shop linked on this page is managed by Handango.
Developer Information
You can find information related to developing software for the Sony Ericsson T610 on the sites listed below:
- Sony Ericsson Developer World T610
- Sony Ericsson Developer World Java Tips, Tricks, & Code
- Ericsson Mobility World Tools & Enablers
- SUN Java Wireless Developer Homepage
Summary
I had the T610 on evaluation loan from the local T-Mobile business office for three weeks. During that period, I found its most important aspects were:
- Small size and low weight.
- Good battery life.
- Extremely easy Bluetooth access configuration.
The wireless phone and PDA markets are converging on two distinct form factors. There are devices that are primarily PDAs that have phone features added to them. The other set of devices that seems to be getting more attention are the so-called smartphones that provide PDA functionality to devices that are primarily phones. The Sony Ericsson T610 provides us, I believe, with a third convergence alternative.
The T610 performs fewer functions than either the PDA-phones or the smartphones. However, it delivers these fewer functions extremely well and with excellent battery-power efficiency. Its excellent and easy-to-configure Bluetooth capability lets you easily pair it with whatever Bluetooth-enabled PDA or notebook PC for a custom-fit mobile computing environment. It may be, then, that this kind of best-of-breed individual components provides a better mobile-computing model for some of us by providing a simpler and timelier upgrade path for different phone and PDA features.
Where to Find More Information About the Sony Ericsson T610
- Sony Ericsson t-six-ten consumer information site
- Sony Ericsson T610 production information page
- Sony Ericsson T610 accessories
- HP iPAQ Pocket PC 2003 Bluetooth Driver Update version 1.4.1.58 (4 Nov. 03) Corrects BT File Explorer lockup after access was denied from an FTP connection through Ericsson T610 phone.
Todd Ogasawara is the editor of MobileAppsToday.com. He has been named a Microsoft Most Valuable Professional (MVP) in the Mobile Devices category for the past several years. You can find his personal website focusing on Mobile Device Technology at www.mobileviews.com.
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Showing messages 1 through 51 of 51.
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The best technology phone T610
2008-07-16 02:43:10 Polluk [Reply | View]
Sony Ericsson Mobile Phones (http://www.mobilejazz.co.uk/sony-ericsson-mobile-phones.asp) company makes attractive mobile phones and mobile phone accessories, and develops powerful mobile broadband technology. T610, was SE’s first attempt in bringing forward a mobile phone (http://www.freecontractmobilephone.co.uk/) which would set a standard, and turn the cell phone business 180 degrees.
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SE T610 Camera Problem
2007-06-13 13:51:03 Kebbe [Reply | View]
I recently purchased a new SE T610 Camera Phone a little over a week ago. The built-in camera worked the first day but I can no longer select the camera function or used the built-in camera. Please give me some solution to solving this problem.
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.amr problem
2006-07-08 08:18:54 ishak_p [Reply | View]
HI EVBDY,
THE S.E T610 IS AN FANTASTIC ONE.BUT IHAVE AN PROBLEM THAT IN MY PHONE THE FILES STORED AS .AMR IS
AT A VERY LOW VOICE. CAN IT BE INCREASE? PLZ HELP.
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internet
2006-06-07 12:22:36 mrash [Reply | View]
how do i use this phone with my laptop to get the internet????? what do i need to buy or do?? -
internet
2006-06-07 18:15:46 Todd Ogasawara [Reply | View]
Generally speaking (WIndows XP or Mac OS X based notebook), a Bluetooth adatper for the notebook and setting up Bluetooth to use the phone as a modem should work. But, if you are using something like Windows 98 or Windows NT on your notebook, the likelihood that the Bluetooth driver will work drops way down. -
internet
2006-06-07 18:15:40 Todd Ogasawara [Reply | View]
Generally speaking (WIndows XP or Mac OS X based notebook), a Bluetooth adatper for the notebook and setting up Bluetooth to use the phone as a modem should work. But, if you are using something like Windows 98 or Windows NT on your notebook, the likelihood that the Bluetooth driver will work drops way down.
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URGENT!!! download help
2005-07-17 06:02:49 popin_fresh [Reply | View]
I got my T610 yesterday and i went and downloaded 2 wallpapers, they are compatible with the phone everything was fine until a little envelope appeared at the top with a @ in the corner What does this mean???
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T610
2005-04-25 21:22:11 Metheos [Reply | View]
I have had this phone for nearly a year now. I have had no problems with it. I absolutely love the phone! It is a very sturdy phone, I have certainly taken it through the gauntlet with it always in a front pocket and getting banged around. The bluetooth is an absolute dream to use. I love being able to transfer any midi file and custom tailored themes to the phone so it accurately portrays my personality. Since owning this phone, I have convinced several of my friends to invest in one as well, and they absolutely love it as well. ;-)
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EVERYTHING IS OK WHIT MY T610
2005-04-06 13:37:08 SOKRE [Reply | View]
I HAVE READ ALL OF THESE COMMENTS, AND I DIDNT HAVE NOT EVEN ONE PROBLEM LIKE THIS, ONLY THAT OUNE WHEN SOMEBODY WROUTE THAT THE MEMORY IS TOO LOW, BUT EVERYTHING ELSE IS VERY GOOD!!!
I LOVE THE PHONE!!
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sony ericsson t610
2005-02-19 09:33:45 lippo61@yahoo.co.uk [Reply | View]
help me please i cant work my phone i cannot get wap, for picture messages or sounds tried my server still no joy can ny1 help thanks
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Using bluetooth to take info from t610 to g4..help..
2005-01-28 09:48:53 mr_b [Reply | View]
Hi,
I just received a replacement t610 and now need to transfer info from the phone memory to my new phone, I am imagining I use bluetooth to put the info on my g4 powerbook and then send to my new t610 ???...please help as I don't see info on ericsson site.
thanks
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This phone inhales sharply with pursed lips
2004-09-16 13:15:18 cloetus [Reply | View]
I foolishly reneged on my vow to never buy another Ericsson product because I just had to have bluetooth and the only other phone I could find at the time that had it was the Nokia with the round dial. eww.
Don't know if it's my carrier (T-Mobile--also inhales) or the phone, but reception is crap in the two areas of town I spend much of my time. I doubt I'll buy another SE phone. My buddy who has a 616 also hates his...
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My T610 Works Great
2004-07-13 12:08:02 eurydice_96 [Reply | View]
I've had my T610 for about 4 months now and I haven't had any problems at all. I switched from a Nokia 8210. It wasn't as simple as my Nokia, but I am already used to it.
I think this is a great phone. I have even dropped it several times without any issues afterwards.
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same problems
2004-05-04 16:34:35 ato1 [Reply | View]
Its the same story it freeze , also you cant reassigned a function to a different bottom......I will never buy a phone like this ever
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Single greatest flaw
2004-03-14 12:08:13 farbewerk [Reply | View]
with the T610 is the fact that there are very limited means to get your phone updated (firmware, et al) without sending the phone away to S/E for 2-3 weeks. It's a great phone but both T-Mobile and S/E completely stonewalled me as neither has walk in service centers. One of their support technicians let slip that they could update the phone over the phone but was quickly slapped down by a subsequent technician. It's what I get for voting with my eyes. Should have done more research. So now my options range from being without my phone for 2-3 weeks or voiding the warranty by using third party software and a data cable. Shame on both of you T-Mobile and S/E.
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Sony Ericsson phone problems
2004-03-12 13:08:43 foster [Reply | View]
I have used 3 of these phones over twelve weeks and all have had problems with the screen freezing and loss of function of all the buttons.
Freeze time can last 2-3 minutes to greater than 15 minutes. The first two were exchanged at the ATT Wireless store within the 30 day windows. The third was required to be done by mail. I am now demanding an exchange. The personnel at ATT Wireless personally reproduced the problem.
The Blue Tooth pairing to the Jabra would also unexpectedly drop.
I would never buy this phone. -
Sony Ericsson phone problems
2004-12-27 11:24:16 thunder15 [Reply | View]
well, i have this problem that it doesn't react anymore! but what do you think i should do? should i take out the battery or should i leave it in and wait until it's gettin' better? i don't know what to do?
are you serious that this problem isn't caused by a virus?
please write back. thx!
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t610 betteryproblem
2004-03-07 05:41:56 vvsam [Reply | View]
Hi,
I have a sony T610 cell phone. I had a problem yesterday. My batter was about 40% and while I was talking on phone(about half hour) the battery died.
Since yesterday I had carged it again for about 12 hrs but still it is not working at all.
It shows the battery as full but when I try to start it it doesn't.
Does any one know what the problem is
Thanks
Sam
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operator logo
2004-02-19 08:26:21 kazz [Reply | View]
hi there, anyone knows how to remove the operator logo of the service provider? cos its kinda ugly when theres a nice theme against it. =)
thanks! :)
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t610 is very fragile
2004-02-13 06:29:53 amccarri [Reply | View]
I was attracted to the small size and bluetooth features. I've replaced 3 phones in a month, 2 within the same week. It seems to have a bug where sometimes when you disconnect the charger, it will leave the phone in an unusable state. All the number keys will work but the soft keys, joystick, and power button will not. -
t610 is very fragile
2004-10-23 08:06:10 upsetwithsony [Reply | View]
I agree with your comments. My T610 is 8 weeks old, but looks like it's 5 years already. The button text has worn off in my pocket (I remind people, in less than 8 weeks)
I've just come across the soft-key, joystick and power button problem and took it to our local service centre. They accepted it without questions and told me it's a known problem. I'm now without a phone for the next month - thank you Sony Ericsson
I should have learnt from mypast experiences I guess. Ericsson used to be really good. I owned a SH888 and R320s which were great in their time. Then things changed. I got a T39m, then a T300 - these were extremely bad phones with multiple software problems and poor build quality.
I've owned and used many phones in my time - Nokia, Ericsson, Sony Ericsson, Sagem, Trium, Motorola, Sendo, Alcatel, Siemens, etc. as my work is based in the telecoms industry. My advice (certainly I will be sticking by it from now on) - only ever buy Nokia! - they might not be as cool as the latest Samsung or Sony Ericsson, but their software is first class and build quality far above the competition! The Nokia's I have owned (1610, 3310, 6310i and 6610) were absolutely flawless and lasted years with very few signs of wear.
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t610 sony ericsson
2004-01-17 14:26:20 anonymous2 [Reply | View]
the battery life die`s if ya play the java games
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Phonelist memory too small
2004-01-06 22:28:48 anonymous2 [Reply | View]
The T616 is a nice little phone,
but the consumer should be permitted to
choose how to "spend" the built in memory.
For example I should be able to delete all
the rings, themes, pictures, etc
and dedicate the space to the phonelist
(which seems bound and deterimed to be limited to
just over 500 entries)
I currently have >1MB of free space and
can't fit my phonelist in.
Sigh.
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Phonelist memory too small
2004-01-07 10:15:07 Todd Ogasawara [Reply | View]
You bring up a really good point. Limited phone number memory is standard for non-smartphones. That is why I think that the two-device solution might be a good fit for people like you and me with large contact lists. You can use a Bluetooth enabled Pocket PC (or Palm OS box with Bluetooth) that can hold thousands of phone numbers partnered with a phone like the T610/T616. My HP iPAQ 2215 shown in the article can, for example, dial the T610/T616 right from the Pocket PC. I can tap on a phone number on the Pocket PC to initiate dialing on the T610. It is a good device partnership IMHO.
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LCD screen
2004-01-06 09:29:21 anonymous2 [Reply | View]
hi there, theres a faint blinking of the lcd screen, esp when im charging it. is there something wrong with the phone? -
LCD screen
2004-01-18 04:28:57 threedaymonk [Reply | View]
Mine also flickers slightly when connected to the adapter, but doesn't when disconnected. It's nothing to worry about - it's probably just a feature of imperfect voltage regulation in the adapter. -
LCD screen
2004-01-07 10:17:32 Todd Ogasawara [Reply | View]
I don't recall seeing that. However, you may want to contact Sony Ericsson's support staff or visit a nearby store that carries the T610 to see if they see the same thing on units there.
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Battery
2004-01-06 09:05:44 anonymous2 [Reply | View]
hi there, ive bought the phone on the 19th dec, 2003 which up till date makes it more than 2 wks since i first started using it. The battery life seems very short as for normal usage such as smsing, and occasional chatting, ive to charge it every 2 days. Ive charged the battery for 8 hours on first charging. Is there something wrong with the battery pack or what? -
Battery
2004-12-26 04:34:40 Marns [Reply | View]
That's strange, I've just got my new T610 and I really like it. I only had to recharge the phone for 2 hours on first recharge and it has lasted 2 days with phone calls and smsing. Its better than my old Nokia 3310.
I dont really think there is much use for the 'conditioning' of the battery - surely technology these days allows for human slackness (ie. not fully winding down the battery before recharge).
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Battery
2004-01-01 09:44:50 anonymous2 [Reply | View]
I have this phone for over a week now. The battery seems to drain off in 1.5 days just on standby. Since I have a new number, nobody called me nor did I call anyone.
So how can the battery drain so quick. I did charge the phone before using.
Any suggestions or am I missing something. -
Battery
2004-01-01 23:42:27 Todd Ogasawara [Reply | View]
Two thoughts:
1. Take a look at how you carry the phone and consider the possibility that the buttons may be frequently pressed inadvertantly (e.g., in a pants pocket). You may want to carry the phone differently to see if this is the case.
2. Try cycling the battery through a couple of complete discharges to see if that conditions the battery a bit. I.e., start with a full charge and let it go to zero. -
Battery
2004-11-26 02:32:40 Marns [Reply | View]
[QUOTE=toddogas]2. Try cycling the battery through a couple of complete discharges to see if that conditions the battery a bit. I.e., start with a full charge and let it go to zero.[/QUOTE]
Toddogas (or anyone that can answer my question): Are you sure that this would work, it sounds like a good idea so I'm inclined to go along with it. Do you recommend doing this forever, or just the first few battery lives, say three or four times?
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signal issues?
2003-12-22 13:35:45 anonymous2 [Reply | View]
A guy at a wireless shop steered me away from this
phone because it doesn't "hold a signal" as well
as some samsung phones. Does anybody measure this
in any way sufficient to agree/disagree about
this assessment? -
signal issues?
2003-12-22 23:36:29 Todd Ogasawara [Reply | View]
While writing the review I searched around for comments about the T610. I read a couple of comments about the supposed weakness of the T610's ability to obtain and hold a signal. However, I did not notice this as a special problem during the three weeks I spent testing the phone. It didn't significantly better or worse than other GSM phones I've tried with the T-Mobile service...todd -
signal issues
2003-12-23 07:07:51 anonymous2 [Reply | View]
As a user of the Sony Ericsson T610. I have found that it does have problems holding a signal. This is howver very infrequent. I mived from the Nokia 8310 to this handset as part of a free upgrade on my t-mobile contact. On the whole i prefer this phone the navigation is just a simple and it has all of the features. The camera works well in sufficient light, and it looks sexy ! The signal problem it isn't major it happens now and again for maybe five seconds. -
signal issues
2004-06-16 11:21:59 sam22277 [Reply | View]
The signal problems are quite serious. I had a siemens c35i(quite outdated) but it showed me a signal level at 3/5 bars at my workplace. The t610 shows a maximum of 1/5 and often looses connection. And worse, when it looses connection, it does not retry to get connected again, even when you take the phone to place with stronger signals. A network search has to be launched manually or to turn it off and start again(remember windows?!).
I'm stuck with this t610 as the shop wont take it back! Does anybody have a remedy for this?
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Camera
2003-12-12 03:27:44 anonymous2 [Reply | View]
I must note that the photos quality is very very poor.
I agree that this is a very nice phone, the OS/Software is easy to use, but really the quality of the camera cannot be said as "OK", it is quite useless IMHO. -
Camera
2003-12-22 11:55:39 anonymous2 [Reply | View]
The T610 is an absolutely amazing phone, taking into account every feature .. including the size. Yes the Nokia 3650 may have a better picture taking resolution, but let's face it: the phone is a beast and no one wants to carry a "remote control" around in their pocket. The T610 is all around one of the finest phones available. -
Camera
2003-12-12 13:21:24 Todd Ogasawara [Reply | View]
Well, everyone is entitled to their own opinion. But, I certainly do not classify the T610's integrated camera as useless. If you look at the
article comparing the T610 camera with other mini-camera systems I have on my personal site, you can see it actually compares pretty well with higher resolution cameras. Does it compare with a 5 megapixel camera? Not really. But, it sure is a lot easier to carry around and more likely to be with you for something interesting to photograph. I think the T610's camera is quite acceptable for what it was intended to do: Let you take quick unscheduled photographs anyplace and anytime. Are the photos suitable for an 8x10 print? No. Are they suitable for a 4x6 print? Well, with a little unsharp filter work and some contrast enhancement, the resulting prints can be ok. Certainly better than not having the photo at all. And, that, to me, is the value of any of these camera-phones. You can get the photo you would have otherwise completely missed...todd -
Camera
2004-11-25 21:51:09 GraemeT610user [Reply | View]
In regards to the comments about the camera being useless and the different opinions. I brought one of the first ones available in tasmania well over 12 months ago I would think and I think It was a fairly new phone at the time. I agree the camera is worse than useless on my phone and a couple of others I have seen of the same age are equally useless, BUT I know of heaps of people who have got what must be second release units the phones look Identical but seem to be a bit quicker in the OS but the real difference is in the camera, we have downloaded photos from a friends via the infared on the laptop and printed quite ok snaps off the colour printer. I enquired at the Telstra shop why the differences, he indicated that they'd be from different batches and I could send my phone away for a software upgrade but this would cost and take a few weeks. So I agree that SOME of the cameras are useless, but there is a way to get better results if your willing to wait so don't knock an otherwise excellent phone. -
T616 Camera almost useless
2003-12-15 07:27:20 anonymous2 [Reply | View]
The T616 camera is not completely useless. It is fine for creating custom wallpaper for the phone. I had one of the T616 images printed on photo paper (4x6 and wallet size). The wallet size looked terrible. The 4x6 was awful. I don't see how Photoshop could fix this mess.
Other than the camera, the T616 is fine. The menuing is a bit excessive.
The T616 is my wife's phone. I have a Nokia 3650 whose photo quality is superior to anything else I have seen. It even makes good 4x6 prints (a bit fuzzy). -
Camera
2003-12-12 05:10:45 anonymous2 [Reply | View]
You don't make clear your frame of reference.
Are you saying that it is poor by the standard of cameraphones at this price-point, or are you making an absolute aesthetic judgement that pictures below a certain quality threshold are of no use.
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Camera
2003-12-14 23:53:05 jwenting [Reply | View]
IMO the second is true without doubt.
Whether the first is true or not I cannot tell as I don't have a T610. I do have a Nokia 3650 and I consirer the camera in that one to be useless. I've used it once to record a background for the camera but never again.
Maybe the fact that I am a photography buff and at any time carry at least one (and more often than not two) cameras with me has something to do with this (my poorest camera otherwise is a 5MP Nikon). -
Camera
2003-12-15 07:31:57 anonymous2 [Reply | View]
If you want to be absolute, compared to a 5 megapixel Nikon, almost everything sucks....You must have great eyes, being able to accurately evaluate the quality of an image on a 1.5in by 2in screen....
Considering that the 3650 image is 640x480, the picture quality is decent. I never use anything but high quality mode. -
Camera
2003-12-23 09:48:50 anonymous2 [Reply | View]
Hi
I never thought about using phones camera to take pictures siriously. It's intended to take pictures of friends (to set conjunction to a number in phonebook) and for fun (IMHO). And I think phones will never be used as an even amateur digital photocamera. Maybe in a few years there will be a videophones in common use, but they will never have such pozibilities like amateurs digi camcorders. In a future will be devices containing everything human needs (phone, computer, watch, ebook, camera, camcorder, passport, keys, health book, personal advisor etc. etc.
Back to T610 - I was amazingly surpriced by this phone ease of use, user friendly soft, beautiness etc. You know what I mean - you are using one application of two with the same abilities but with nicer menus, windows etc. I had posibility to compare a Motorola, Nokia and Siemens phones, and trully I like SE most. It is just .... nicer.
Regards





