![]() It couldn’t e-mail, or facebook, or tweet (but the last two weren’t invented yet, so we can’t really blame the phone for that). It could call and it could send text messages (it was actually the first phone ever that could do that) of a maximum of 120 characters (and you thought composing a 140 character tweet was challenging). It not only had an external antenna, but you had to extend it to get decent signal most of the time. I also had the extended battery which, as you can see, very nearly doubles its thickness (and which, at four days, lasted twice as long as the original battery (and four times as long as my current smartphone’s…go figure)). Okay, so its official model was the 2110 (though I instantly got a photo of one when I typed “Nokia Brick” into Google). My first cellular phone was a Nokia Brick. ![]() ![]() Writing about the demise of the Blackberry got me all nostalgic about the various phones I’ve had over the years.
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