Thursday, 4 April 2013

Nokia 6150, thirteen years on


When I started working in the mobile telecoms industry back in 2000, my employer at the time gave me a Nokia 6150. It was my first mobile phone and I loved it. At the time Nokia was the dominant force in mobile handsets and the 6150 was regarded as a top end device. Apple on the other hand in 2000 was purely focused on computers, launching products such as the Power Mac G4 and the iBook.

As time passed I got other mobiles and sold off the Nokia 6150. A few days ago however in a fit of nostalgia I went on eBay and purchased another 6150. A couple of days later I had in my hands and the rubbery keys felt instantly familiar. As I powered it on to make that first call, it got me thinking how much things have changed in the past 13 years..

So let's see. The Nokia 6150 supports GSM. That is it. No GPRS, no EDGE, no 3G, no HSDPA, no HSUPA, no HSPA+. Life was simple back then. Just GSM. The 6150 was dual band so it supported GSM in the 900MHz (no E-GSM though) and  the 1800MHz band. This at the time was quite a revolution. It also supported SMS, but only to a maximum of 160 characters, no concatenation. For data, it supported CSD (Circuit Switched Data) which essentially was a dial-up modem at an amazing speed of 9.6kbps! From a codec perspective it suppoted Full Rate, Half Rate and Enhanced Full Rate. No AMR obviously. Looking further into its capabilities it also supports the A5/2 cipher algorithm which has since been removed as a ciphering option by the GSMA.

Fast forward 13 years and the mobile telecoms industry has completely changed. But GSM networks are still around and are still backwards compatible as my Nokia 6150 works perfectly. I guess this is testament to those people in ETSI who developed GSM.

Comparing the Nokia 6150 to my current mobile, an iPhone 4, is obviously an unfair comparison but one thing has not changed...

The weight. They both weigh 140gr!

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