Nokia 6620

Nokia 6620
Manufacturer Nokia
Compatible networks United States GSM 850/1800/1900 MHz
Predecessor Nokia 3620/3660
Successor Nokia 6670
Related Nokia 6600
Nokia 6630
Nokia 7610
Form factor Candybar
Dimensions 109 x 58 x 23.6 mm
Weight 124 g
Operating system Series 60/Symbian OS
Memory 12 MB
Removable storage MMC (32 MB included)
Battery BL-5C, 3.7v, 850mAh Li-ion
Display 176 x 208 pixel 65,536 colors
Rear camera 0.3 Megapixels 640x480 VGA
Connectivity IrDA, Bluetooth, USB

The 6620 is a smartphone created by Nokia, announced in January 2004,[1] running on Series 60 2nd Edition and the Symbian operating system. It was the first EDGE-capable phone for the Americas' market.[2]

It is a version of Nokia's 6600 smartphone for the North American market, featuring all the features of the 6600 such as the VGA camera, MultiMediaCard slot, Bluetooth and color screen, but with a change to the North American GSM frequencies, newer version of Nokia Series 60 v2 with Feature Pack 1 while original 6600 had common Series 60 v2 without Feature Packs, the doubling of internal RAM, the addition of Nokia's new Pop-Port connector, the inclusion of stereo sound, and a new EDGE capability, effectively giving it double the download speeds of current General Packet Radio Service (GPRS) equipped phones.

This phone usually comes packaged with the charger, a battery, a 32 megabyte MMC card and a USB cable.

Features

Digital downloads

The EDGE capability allows the 6620 to play streaming video, allowing users to view video clips that are not stored on the phone itself. The phone also supports downloading smart messages from the network, depending on support from the network operator, to update settings.

Technical specifications

The main CPU in this phone is an ARM925t compatible chip running at 150 MHz while the 6600 only runs at 104 MHz. The camera supports resolutions up to 640x480 and has a 2x digital zoom. It can record video for up to 10 minutes. The RealPlayer software can play back video and audio, and also files in MP3 and AVI format. The talk time is listed at 4 hours, and 200 hours of standby.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.