The Iconic Nokia 3310 is Coming Back quoting to : huffingtonpost

Released in September of 2000, the Nokia 3310 was a little brick of a phone with a battery life that could extend for over a week. There are plenty of Nokia 3310s of very dubious provenance (i.e., possibly fake) available for about $20 on eBay right now. Phone-leaker Evan Blass has the scoop at VentureBeat:But perhaps the most interesting of these devices, at least from the perspective of mobile enthusiasts, is not a smartphone at all, but a modern version of a classic workhorse of a feature phone, the Nokia 3310. One of the most iconic phones ever released is coming back. As its legend has grown, it's been shot, blown up, run over by a tank, and turned into a meme.


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The Iconic Nokia 3310 is Coming Back

Millennials (or whatever they call the really young people now), the best cellphone ever made was the Nokia 3310. They found a Nokia 3310 with two bars of battery left. HMD Global Oy, the company with exclusive rights to market Nokia phones is poised to unveil a 3310 homage on February 26 in Barcelona. For one reason: it was really, really good at being a cellphone. Venturebeat reports:Perhaps the most interesting of these devices, at least from the perspective of mobile enthusiasts, is not a smartphone at all, but a modern version of a classic workhorse of a feature phone, the Nokia 3310.

The Classic Nokia 3310 Is Getting an Update and Coming Back
The Nokia 3310, otherwise known as the brick for its tendency to not break, ever, is coming back. The report suggests that the new Nokia 3310 will be unveiled at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona later this month. The Nokia 3310 was released in 2000, and while its hardiness is probably still unmatched, phones have become a little more useful since then. As we've noted before, this isn't exactly Nokia at work — HMD is licensing the name, although the new company was started by ex-Nokia staffers. The 3310 is undoubtedly a nostalgia play on HMD's part — lots of fond memories of the 3310, especially considering most units would probably still work today.


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