#Nokia 3650
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nokia 3650, codename cameron
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Nokia 3650, 2003
Theme Week: Cutting Edge Technology 🤖
#nokia#cell phone#electronics#nokia 3650#cutting edge technology#2000s#2003#vintage advertising#theme week
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In order:
Nokia 7600 | Nokia 7280 | Nokia 6800 | Motorola V70 | Nokia 3250 | Nokia 7610 | Sonim XP-1 | Sony Ericsson W995 | Nokia 3650 | Nokia 7380 | Nokia N90 | Samsung X830 | Ericsson R310s
#nokia#nokia 7600#nokia 7280#nokia 6800#motorola#motorola v70#t9#novelty#nokia 3250#nokia 7610#sonim#sonim xp1#sliding#sony#sony ericsson#sony ericsson w995#nokia 3650#nokia 7380#nokia n90#samsung#samsung x830#ericsson#ericsson r310s#phone id
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sometimes i feel like a nokia 3650 in a world of smartphones
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hi i would like 2 be assigned a flip phone have a doodle also
WOWW WHAT A WONDERFUL KITY 🫶 THANK YOU
Nokia 3650! specifically in the deep blue color too. the keyboard was designed after old rotary phones :-]
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Nokia 3650 Year 2003 Symbian 6.1 #cellphonemuseum #retronokia #retromobile #2003nostalgia #2003 #from2003 #veryrare #oldschool #oldphone #olddevice #nostaligicsong #nostalgicphone #nostalgia #symbian #orange #vodafone #old #symbian6 #symbian60 https://www.instagram.com/p/CnSWrRis0G5/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
#cellphonemuseum#retronokia#retromobile#2003nostalgia#2003#from2003#veryrare#oldschool#oldphone#olddevice#nostaligicsong#nostalgicphone#nostalgia#symbian#orange#vodafone#old#symbian6#symbian60
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The Nokia 3650 classic to resurrect this year
Memories bring back memories! #nokia #nokia3650 #everytechever
Over the past few years, HMD Global has brought back several Nokia classics ranging from the 3310 (2017), 8110 4G, and more recently the 6300 4G. According to sources, the company is planning on rebooting the Nokia 3650. The original Nokia 3650 was announced in September 2002 as the successor to the Nokia 7650. It runs Symbian OS Series 60. A very distinctive feature of the Nokia 3650 was its…
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Nokia can Re-launching this strange looking phone
Nokia can Re-launching this strange looking phone #lahoreherald
HMD Global has been bringing back some Nokia classics over the years, and the latest on the list is probably the controversial Nokia 3650. According to a new report, the classic-looking device could be the next reboot in 2021. The Nokia 3650 2003 has a unique round keyboard which sets it apart from all other functional phones and a small top screen with a resolution of 176 x 208 pixels. This…
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HMD Global rumored to bring the Nokia 3650 back to life
HMD Global rumored to bring the Nokia 3650 back to life
This is more like a purely fan-reimagined thing or perhaps has basis to it but according to new reports, HMD Global is about to bring back the stylish Nokia 3650 later this year. Millennials are mostly familiar with Nokia’s crazy designs back in the day and the Nokia 3650 remains one of the strangest thing around. The original Nokia 3650 had a circular keypad layout that took a lot of getting…
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Nokia 3650 Review - Uniquely Designed Camera Phone
Nokia 3650 Review: Released in 2003, there probably will never be a phone like the Nokia 3650 again. This was the successor to the Nokia 7650 – a very ambitious phone by Nokia incorporating a slide keypad, a camera and also a large screen. It also ran the Series 60 software, which was distinctively different from the regular Series 30/40 for other Nokia phones. This took advantage of the larger…
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Creator Spotlight: @still-life-mostly
Muhammad Hardi Saputra, familiarly called Hardi, is a self-taught miniature still-life photographer and stop motion artist. His work is a mix of craft, comic, and fantasy elements. It aims to bring peace and tranquility to the viewers through their imaginations. His childhood dream was to create pictures that would make people happy just by looking at them. He has found a way to do exactly that by combining the beauty of miniatures with the art of photography. The stories he tells through his photographs are full of life and give the viewer a sense of nostalgia. He loves crafting and creating art that has a story behind it. To him, each piece has a life of its own, and he allows it to speak for itself. He says, “Art is a collaboration between the artist and the viewer. The work you do is only a part of the journey.”
Check out our interview with Hardi below!
How did you get your start in photography and stop motion?
My hobby started when I was still a kid. I was fascinated by claymation on TV. Around the year 2003, when my sister got her first smartphone (it was Nokia 3650), I borrowed my sister’s phone to make a stop motion with my tiny robot pencil toppers. I didn’t use photos and turned them into videos. Instead, I used the r cord and pause button immediately. So the stop motion is basically a compilation of 0.5 seconds videos. It was really fun. Then when the smartphone got faster, my pause and record button trick didn’t work anymore. My stop motion video-making ended, except for my photography.
Then after I got into college, I found a photographer sharing his works on Tumblr, and I knew that day that I wanted to be a photographer. Then, my parents bought me a laptop and camera around 2013. I started shooting some photos. When I saw a looping cinemagraph video on Tumblr, my old stop motion video ideas sparked again. So I researched on YouTube to figure out how to make a looping cinemagraph GIF just by GIMP. After some trial and error, I managed to get it working. So I used my laptop to make my first ever looping cinemagraph GIF video.
Later I ran out of stuff to make a cinemagraph, so I experimented with stop motion with any objects I could find in my bedroom. After a while, I realized I could make animations using paper. These small moments are captured on my Canon Eos M., and this is how my photography journey began. So, I thank Tumblr for giving me the inspiration and a platform to share my stop-motion GIFs.
What do you wish you knew when you first started out creating art that you know now?
I have learned that investing in a new laptop would have been a better choice if I had to choose between a laptop and a smartphone. I used to buy a new phone every two years, and as a result, I didn’t have enough money to upgrade my laptop. I realized that my photo and video editing must be faster, so I can have more time to make creative choices like what kind of color should I tune, which object I could animate and so on. This new smartphone only solved the social pressure to keep up with what everyone was doing.
Now, I saved my money to upgrade my laptop so I can create more content in less time. I also stopped watching smartphone reviews because they influenced me to buy a new smartphone. I decided to learn more skills like 3D designing or photo and video editing on YouTube instead.
What is the hardest part of your process?
I use resin 3D printers to create my subjects. The process of printing them is really simple, but it does take a lot of physical work to get the prints looking their best. Sometimes they got like blemishes that need to be sanded down or parts that need to be glued on. These steps aren’t exactly my favorite parts of the process, but the results are totally worth it!
How has your style developed over the years?
My first stop motion GIF is this blue butterfly. I put my camera on a table and made a butterfly out of paper. It was initially quite challenging because the camera moved when I pressed the shutter button. Luckily the touch screen can also trigger the camera, so I touched the screen lightly so the camera didn’t move. After that, I got a loop of about 1 second of motion.
Then, I made another butterfly. This time I use the photo levitation technique in my stop motion video. I use wire and remove the wires frame by frame. GIF with floating subjects takes much more time to finish a frame than the first one. However, the result is really rewarding because it’s more natural looking.
Right now, after I got my 3D printer, I chose astronauts as my main subject. At the moment, only the secondary subject moves, such as flying rockets, clouds that are moving across the sky, and ocean waves. In the future, I look forward to making a moveable astronaut, probably a robot, because they have joints. Or a wiggling alien or any kind of sci-fi space creature that could be explored in a galaxy far away.
Have any of your projects surprised you with its outcome?
The project that surprised me the most with its outcome is this Astronaut Diner GIF. The color looks like what I wanted. I didn’t know that adding checkerboard tiles could make me feel so nostalgic. I sanded, painted, and glued every piece of the tiles. It felt like building a miniature interior set.
My favorite part of the project is the coffee steam. I use a tiny piece of thread from a cotton ball to make it look like the steam coming from the cup. I animated the steam using Photoshop. I chose to animate the steam because I thought it would be an interesting way to add movement to the image. I didn’t think it would look very realistic if no movement existed.
Biggest pet peeve as a photographer?
Batteries. Sometimes when I was shooting some frames, my camera or flashlight battery died because I forgot to charge them before I started shooting my stop motion photos. I have to restart taking photos frame by frame because the camera angle will lightly change after I take out the battery.
What does your work set up look like?
My photography setup is just a table with one flashlight in a softbox and another flashlight in an umbrella. I use a Canon Eos M camera to take photos. I enjoy taking photos in my bedroom because it’s straightforward to set up. For example, I just set up everything on the table and snap away! It’s also very easy to clean up because I just have to put everything back in place when I am done. The setup in that photo is the setup that I used to create this article banner photo.
Who on Tumblr inspires you and why?
John Carey of @yesterdaywasonly. Because I probably wouldn’t know Tumblr if he didn’t make a Tumblr profile for me to follow. I follow him because he shares wallpapers, and I am still using photos from his website as my laptop wallpaper.
Thank you so much for stopping by, Hardi! For more of his creations, check out his Tumblr, @still-life-mostly!
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The pre-smartphone days
I was listening to a podcast today between John Gruber and Dieter Bohn about the pre-smartphone era and the heyday of Palm. In their conversation, they talked about the Handspring Visor, PDAs without wi-fi, and good old T9 dictionary input.
I've always had a fascination with phones. Even as a young grade schooler who just learned how to connect to the internet (with a dial-up modem), I remember that one of the websites I would religiously visit are nokia.com and sonyericsson.com.
Phones occupied a huge part of my mindspace back in those days. I had an almost unhealthy obsession with them. I craved for a top-of-the-line phone and looked longingly at what others had. Somehow, it is still imprinted in my head right now - my crush had a red 8250, my best friend had a navy blue 3310 (where I used to play a lot of Snake 2 and Space Impact), mom had a red 6150, and dad had a fancy 7650.
Those were the days. Just the mention of these four-digit phone names evoke so much childhood nostalgia. Text-mates, phone backlight upgrades, ringtones, and logos. The 160 character limit per text message which contorted our use of language, and the 30 message limit on the inbox which stopped you from receiving a message until you delete your inbox and outbox (nowhere to keep the memorable messages then?).
Let me take a trip down the phone memory lane.
My first phone was the Nokia 5110 (circa 1999, I was probably in Grade 4). It was my dad's old phone and he handed it to me when he got an upgrade.
The phones I wished I had at that time were the Nokia 3210, 8250 (small was cool back then), and the 3310. I especially desired a 3310 because it had the game 'Space Impact' and 'Snake 2.' It made me think that it was such a next-gen phone because of that.
Nokia 5210 was the first phone that I owned that wasn't a hand-me-down. I got it as my Grade 6 graduation gift. I liked how this was shock-proof (even at that time I already recognized how clumsy I was). I loved that it was orange - orange casing and orange backlight.
While I was happy with my Nokia 5210, I remember looking longingly at my dad's 7650. It blew my mind that a phone could take pictures and send them to a friend over long distance.
Not long after, the Nokia 3650 came out. I remember my classmates using it to watch videos, take funny pictures, and play 'polyphonic' ringtones. Looking back at this now, the shape looks funny and the keypad looks strange.
Another classmate had the 'Smart Amazing' phone, which friends also used to watch videos and even surf mobile websites. It was pretty mind-blowing.
I also lusted after these beast phones at the time, followed by Nokia's gaming phone - the N-gage. (Just writing this is triggering dormant desires and those visits to "Hub" at Rockwell)
I then got this O2 XDA Pocket PC after that. It blew my mind to finally have a dream PDA phone. But I remember that it wasn't that easy to use.
Then, my grail phone came out. Until now, I don't think I've loved a phone as much as I did with this one. The Sony Ericsson W810i Walkman phone. It just oozed cool. Plus, it also had that orange accent that made me go crazy.
These were my pre-smartphone phones. As an early adopter, I wanted to try smartphones, and I eventually did with one of the earliest Android phones - the Samsung Galaxy Spica.
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May 01, 2019 at 04:56AM 2ndlilis.blogspot.com/2019/ nokia 3650 normal
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Eddigi mobiljaim:
Siemens A35, M35, C45; Panasonic GD50; Ericsson T65; Sony Ericsson T300, P990i; Samsung Galaxy (nem S) 3, J5 (2016); Nokia 3650, N-Gage, Lumia 610; Motorola T192, One Action; LG KP500; Black Berry Z3; Xiaomi Mi A1; Alcatel C651; Yezz Billy 4.
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Nokia 3650 3D Model in 3D Studio (.3ds), c.
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