Sony Ericsson P910

Sony Ericsson P910
Manufacturer Sony Ericsson
Compatible networks GPRS, HSCSD
Availability by country 3Q, 2004
Predecessor Sony Ericsson P900
Successor Sony Ericsson P990
Weight 150 g
Operating system Symbian OS with UIQ
CPU ARM9 at 156 MHz
Memory 64 MB RAM
Removable storage Memory Stick PRO Duo (up to 2GB)
Battery 1260 mAh
Data inputs Keypad / touchscreen / jog dial / keyboard
Display 262,144 colors
Rear camera 0.3 MP, VGA
Connectivity Bluetooth,IrDA,GSM

The Sony Ericsson P910 is a smartphone by Sony Ericsson introduced in 3Q, 2004 and the successor of the Sony Ericsson P900. The P910 has a full QWERTY keyboard on the back of the flip (the flip can also be removed completely, allowing for a 'traditional' PDA form-factor). The biggest change from the P900 to the P910 is that the P910 supports Memory Stick PRO Duo and the phone's internal memory has been upped from 16 MB to 64 MB. Although Memory Stick PRO Duo comes in larger capacities, the maximum supported by the P910i is 2 GB. It is powered by an ARM9 processor clocked at 156 MHz and runs the Symbian OS with the UIQ graphical user interface. Also, the touchscreen displays 262,144 colours (an 18-bit colour depth), as opposed to the P900's 65,536 (16-bit). It comes in three versions:

One of the key aspects of the P910 is its ability to input text via several methods: multi-tap and T9 text input using the numerical keypad, hand-writing recognition with the pre-installed Jot-Pro software and touchscreen, virtual keyboard on screen and the new QWERTY keyboard on the inside of the flip.

Other enhancements (compared to the P900) include support for HTML browsing, a new numerical keypad with larger keys and a slightly changed outer casing.

Its closest competitors are the palmOne Treo 650, and the Nokia 9500 Communicator. Other competitors include several PDA-phones powered by Windows and manufactured by Taiwan-based HTC.

Sony Ericsson released the successor to the P910 in early 2006. It is called the Sony Ericsson P990.

Specifications

Standard Functions and Programs

Business

Tools

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, April 25, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.