An artful fusion of materials and technology define new mid-range handsets. Nokia 6500 Slide wraps third-generation features in innovative, highly detailed design. The Nokia 6500 Silde is a tribute to high mobile technology and aesthetics. This sleek and stylish phone is easy on pocket without any compromise on features. It comes in silver and black casing and large keys make navigation easy. The Nokia 6500 Slide is one of two 6500 series devices that were announced side by side back in May of this year. Unlike the very thin and simple Nokia 6500 Classic, the Nokia 6500 Slide has a slider form factor of Nokia 6500, stainless steel body work, and an auto-focus digital camera that uses Carl Zeiss lenses. This is a great-looking phone and it's very easy to use. If you're looking for something more advanced then check out the Nokia 6120 classic smartphone, which has video calling and some other extra features. But if you want something a bit less complicated that looks great and still has the benefit of 3G downloads then this could be the phone for you.
Designed with maximum usability in mind with large keys and ergonomically correct and balanced proportions, this phone is just what you're looking for. The Nokia 6500 Slide mobile phone features an enthusiast-quality 3.2-megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss optics and the ability to easily share pictures, videos and even video calls on a television. The Nokia 6500 Slide brings unsurpassed levels of imaging and sharing and delivers a refined tactile experience with its elegant brushed stainless steel finish and smooth slide mechanism. Nokia 6500 slide has dual-band 3G support in addition to quad-band GSM support, Nokia 6500 slide has a built-in 3.2 megapixel auto-focus camera, and a solid media player. Nokia 6500 slide is also quite attractive and uses a QVGA resolution display that can show up to 16 million different color shades. Other features of the new Nokia slider include 2.2 inch color screen with QVGA resolution, dual LED flash, 8x digital zoom, TV-Out, 2nd camera, music player and FM tuner. Measurements of the Nokia 6500 slide are 96.5Ã-46.5Ã-16.4mm.
Fashioned to stand apart from the crowd, the Nokia 6500 slide incorporates a number of design elements not often found in a mid-range device. Ensuring that the sophisticated brushed stainless steel body retains its timeless beauty, a unique hard coating helps to prevent scuffs, scratches, and even fingerprints. Precision engineering of the slide mechanism means that the Nokia 6500 slide feels solid in the hand, yet moves with a smooth, fluid action to create a decidedly upscale user impression. The 3.2 megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss optics found in the Nokia 6500 slide marks the first time that mid-range camera phone consumers have been able to experience the outstanding imaging capability of Carl Zeiss optics. The addition of autofocus, a dual LED flash and 8x digital zoom optimizes the Nokia 6500 slide for creating high-caliber images. Using the speed of 3G technology, these images and videos can be quickly shared with friends around the world, while the TV-out jack allows them to be instantly viewed on any television with standard RCA inputs. The TV-out feature can also be used to allow an entire group of people to simultaneously enjoy the fun of video calling. The Nokia 6500 slide has a micro USB connector to connect to a PC and you can also charge the handset via this connection. With support for Bluetooth 2.0 you can also listen to your favourite tunes wirelessly with a compatible Bluetooth headset. There may only be 20MB of memory on board, but Nokia supplies the phone with a 256MB microSD card that sits in a slot under the stainless steel battery cover. The slot can actually accept cards of up to 4GB in size and you'll certainly want to add some extra storage space to take advantage of the phone's music player. Although the music player and camera are good, the most surprising feature of all on this handset is perhaps its TV output. In the box you'll find an AV lead that connects to the headphone socket at the top of the phone. Hook it up to your TV and the phone's display will be mirrored on your telly. You can then use your TV to view photos and videos or to listen to music. It's a cutting edge feature and works surprisingly well. The phone's battery life is also good as you can get around six hours of talk time from it and the reception and call quality are also very impressive.
Day Of The Mother
Growing up in boarding school, I used to look forward to holidays. The one thing that I think, that fueled my longing for home [apart from missing my parents] had to be the pending meat ?chow down? ? the whole sheep that my father would buy to celebrate my return. Now there is one thing that used to amuse the hell out of me, and that is how my mother used to store a whole sheep for months on end. What boggled my mind was the fact that even when we'd get a weekend off from school; I'd still come home to that sheep and it tasted as good as it did when my dad first bought it.
No, my mother doesn't have some long kept family secret on meat storage ? she has a simple fridge. And as most households have a fridge, most people might find it stupid to have even been awed by common knowledge such as cold storage. Well I don't find it stupid at all; in fact, it still amazes me that that same fridge is still my mother's answer to cold storage. Why can't all forms of storage be that effective? Just imagine; in its fourteen years of existence, that fridge has been neighbor to about fourteen different fruit and vegetable racks (or whatever they call that plastic stand you keep your veggies in).
The way I see things, the general consensus is that fridges are for refrigeration rather than storage (and maybe that's true) but wouldn't it be lovely if you could store everything in a fridge? Before you say that's the silliest thing you've ever heard, consider this; how many storage solutions are as effective as the refrigerator? And of those (if any), how many will, after fourteen years, still serve you better than Friday served Robinson Crusoe did every day of his (spared) life? And that's not half of it; what about the fact that as much as it might be the biggest electrical appliance in your kitchen ? it uses less power than your new dishwasher yet you only use that once a week (at the most) In the meantime, your fridge is never turned off. But should there be a power outage or something of the sort, most fridges will hold out for, at least, two days or so. Last but not least, fridges are not just some invention which keeps our food, drinks and (at times) medical supplies refrigerated; they're more than a mere electrical appliance ? think of the memories, the random messages we leave on them for our loved ones (with those magnetic letters) ? they're part of the family!
I've heard of plastic bags that keep your food fresher for longer?but they too are useless without the mighty refrigerator. A fridge in my opinion is like an experiment gone wrong ? I reckon it was meant to chill your milk for a few days or so; and maybe for cold water?but keeping meat in eating condition for six months or longer? That raises a question in my opinion. It is though, not the only thing it has raised ? it has raised the bar in storage solutions; these plastic and metal container solutions companies had better start thinking of ways to improve storage to within half of what fridges do. Maybe a container whereby you can store a simple pair of jeans for ten years, yet still fit in them two babies and seventy pounds later. Until then the fridge is the mother of all storage.
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