1996 Nicknamed the banana phone because of its curved shape, the Nokia 8110 is also known as the Matrix phone - owing to a starring role in the eponymous 1999 film (albeit in Matrix green, rather than the lilac version pictured here).
Mobile product placement never looked back after the 8110 slipped from Keano Reeves' grasp, giving the camera an eyeful of Nokia goodness before tumbling towards the tarmac. Who wouldn't want one?
The Mighty Finn dominated the late 1990s with many more vanilla offerings than the 8110 so no wonder its launch press release claimed a 'first' for ergonomics: "It feels good in the hand and fits into any pocket. The revolutionary curved design fits the natural shape of your face... The mouthpiece, which has a microphone embedded within it, both protects the keypad and slides forward to fit the contour of your chin."
Touting mobile hardware in the mid-1990s meant shouting about its chin-hugging ergonomics rather than reeling off an acronym soup of tech specs. How times have changed.
Photo credit: Nokia








Comments
There are 9 comments. Join the discussion
1. anonymous
What no 6310 (or the ealier ones or the i derivatives)? It was the stalwart of the business phone market late 90's and early in the noughties (good use of nipple by the way) loads of car kits, huge battery life pretty rugged and never successfully replaced.
http://www.nokia.co.uk/A4222193
Iain
2. anonymous
What!!
No Analogue allowed ?
The Motorola FlipPhone
The NEC P7 - Best signal I ever had.
Also no HTC's mentioned until the end - you forgot the Organge SPV'/T-Mobile Vario/O2 XDA Mini-S and other similar offerings...with the original hidden keyboard. Phone, PDA and (TomTom) SatNav in one smallish device.
3. oliver matthews
The T28 still remains my all time best phone, it's a shame Sony came along.
4. Simon Allen
I agree that it's a great shame that they got involved with Sony.
I cannot deny it's made them loads of money to do Walkman phones but the phones are not as good as they were.
The Smartphone p990 has several benefits over the p910 but it's flaky in too many areas and I doubt that I will buy another.
I have only ever bought Ericsson and S/E phones for my personal use for 15 years but they may have finally managed to get rid of me.
5. Richard A
Best mobile ever = Nokia 6210 without a doubt. It was iconic, hugely popular, and built to last. As for fulfilling its core function of being a mobile telephone, it remains unsurpassed.
Interface was a dream, keys of tactile rubber, excellent call quality and a battery life measured in weeks not hours. Oh, and very rugged - mine survived being accidentally marinaded in olive oil and soldiered on for another 3 years.
When my beloved 6210 was finally lost this summer I was gutted to learn that Orange Cover no longer supplied them, insisting I accept nasty a colour screen cameraphone instead. After 10 days of negotiations they finally agreed to supply me with a magnificent refurbished 6310i instead.
Sure, it has a few too many frills and fripperies and the build quality isn't quite up to its predecessor but it is still everything I want from a mobile phone.
6. anonymous
I can think of many omissions to this list, but by far the most glaring one is the Motorola Startac. It was pretty much the top of the line in cell phones in the late 90's. Sure, the antennas were the weakest I've ever seen, but the Startac was the status symbol of the day. They cost around $300 with a contract back then. I sold phones for Ameritech (which merged with others to form Verizon) from the late 90's until 2002.
There are other phones that bear mentioning, but you have to put the Startac in there
7. Andy Fox
Had severasl of these, fantastic, Broke my Blackberry. Dropped 2 ran over one, kicked one (accidentally) into the manchester shipping canal!
8. Andy Fox
Hmm.. Blackberry Pearl, because everything else before or after is just a toy!
9. Natasha Lomas
I bought a secondhand T28 off eBay - loved the styling but the phone itself wasn't robust enough to survive too long before several faults developed