The concept phone has been made with "nothing new using only renewable materials, without compromising a bit on style," said Kallasvuo.
He added its internal components are "based on environmentally friendly technology".
Photo credit: Nokia
Remaking the mobile...
The concept phone has been made with "nothing new using only renewable materials, without compromising a bit on style," said Kallasvuo.
He added its internal components are "based on environmentally friendly technology".
Photo credit: Nokia
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1. Dr John Dimmock
Half the problem is that the mobile phone companies need “churn” to survive, a bit like Microsoft
I have a Nokia 6310I one of the best mobile phones in respect to reliability and capability and it is now over 12 years old
True, I have made a point of saving a few of these from the dump to use for spares but so far as I am concerned the 6310I is going to be my mobile until I am unable to support it
The question for both Microsoft and companies like Nokia is that once everybody has a workable and relatively reliable tool, there is no need to replace same, look at what’s happening with Vista in the corporate environment, XP-P00 has been give a further 10 years of support and the only reason for this must be that the operating system does the job