This is an old memory. Back when we used #nokialumia phones. My brother bought it and later I used it. #nokialumia625 my fav ever. Great battery n camera. Missing that time. 11 years.
This is an old memory. Back when we used #nokialumia phones. My brother bought it and later I used it. #nokialumia625 my fav ever. Great battery n camera. Missing that time. 11 years.
Краще з обох світів: Apple iPhone SE 3 працює у корпусі Nokia Lumia 1020 https://itc.ua/ua/novini/krashhe-z-oboh-svitiv-apple-iphone-se-3-pratsyuye-u-korpusi-nokia-lumia-1020/ #NokiaLumia #Смартфони #Пристрої #iPhoneSE #Новини #Apple #Nokia #DIY
Can't wait until the #ClearBlack patent expires.
Re-discovered my old Lumia 930 in a drawer and tried to boot it up - no luck. It already had issues when I retired it in 2019.
I miss using Windows Phone sometimes. It really was a pleasure to use.
The firmware version for #Windows10Mobile Lumias could've been called Lumia Emerald, but instead it was just called "Lumia Windows 10".
#Lumia #NokiaLumia #MicrosoftLumia #Microsoft #WindowsPhone (W10M is not WP but some people call it that; it may be a Windows phone but it's not a Windows Phone with a capital P)
HMD Global, the company behind Nokia phones, has officially renamed the NokiaMobile account to HMD (Human Mobile Devices), signifying a shift away from the Nokia brand. This change suggests that new products from HMD will be launched in the future.
HMD stands for Human Mobile Devices, and this renaming indicates a potential brand revitalization. Recent leaks have revealed render images of upcoming HMD models, including one with a 108MP OIS camera and a triple-camera setup. The company seems poised for a fresh start and aims to regain its former success with the HMD brand.
#HMDGlobal #Nokia #Smartphone #MobileTech #TechNews #PhoneLaunch #NokiaLumia #MobileDevices #MWC2024 #GadgetNews #HMDPhone
I want a #Xenon flash on my phone again. Or at least, I think I used to have a Xenon flash.
I miss Nokia Pro Cam.
Anyone else's mobile device history take some turns outside the mainstream?
In middle/early high school, I got my first MP3 player that wasn't a glorified USB stick: a 4 GB #Zune. This little indestructible device sparked my obsession with #Microsoft software. The Zune software (both on-device and the companion software on PC) was gorgeous. Decidedly some of Microsoft's best UI/UX work.
Later in high school I upgraded to a #ZuneHD, and eventually my first cell phone was a #MicrosoftKin TWOm, which incidentally had the same SOC as the Zune HD (a first-gen Nvidia Tegra), and even ran a version of Windows Mobile that integrated the Zune UI itself as the “Music” functionality.
By graduation, I'd begun my journey with #WindowsPhone. From a #NokiaLumia 820, to a Lumia Icon, to my final WP, a now first-party “Microsoft Lumia” 950XL. Stunning devices: high-quality cameras (at the time; the Lumia 1020 in 2013 had a 42 MP main camera, while the next highest resolution camera in a phone at the time was 21MP, a spec that wouldn't be surpassed by another phone for 5 more years), (usually) removable polycarbonate backs with removable batteries, fairly early adoption of Qi (wireless charging)… I could go on and on.
When I finally, begrudgingly, moved on to an #Android device (a pitiful Essential Phone), it wasn't because I didn't like my Windows Phone. I loved it. It was because Microsoft had finally called the time of death.