Hirdetés
Introduction, inexistent packaging
I'd sit alone and watch your light, my only friend through teenage nights. And everything I had to know, I heard it on my radio. - so did Queen sing the song in the ‘80s. That was a long time ago, at least from technological point of view, as electronic devices have gone through enormous development since then. But the radio makes itself heard, although the content is different.
The popularity of mobile phones with a built-in FM radio is unquestionable, although a few years ago Nokia has started omitting this feature from some of their handsets, although this has been one their trademarks beforehand. Sony Ericsson follows a similar strategy: radio may be or be not present, but Walkman is permanent. Knowing these, I never would have imagined that the Japanese-Swedish manufacturer will once launch a “radio-phone” and now I have R300i in my hands – I won’t become a market researcher, that’s sure.
So in 2008 they have built a phone around a feature that is in no way new and one might think that there is nothing left to develop on it. After all radio is just radio; department stores sell them for a couple of bucks, and sometimes we can even get a flashlight edition with Nesquik cocoa (thus making musical children happy), so come on now: what is a “radio-phone” after all? And what’s it for? Probably I wasn’t alone with these questions, but after a few days of testing my opinion has changed radically.
Unfortunately I cannot write anything about the accessories, as I have received none with the sample phone and I have found no information on Sony Ericsson’s website.
A cikk még nem ért véget, kérlek, lapozz!