New Walkman Phone Offers 4GB, 3G

By Ed Oswald | Published February 15, 2006, 1:30 PM

Sony Ericsson W950iSony Ericsson's line of Walkman phones has been a modest success, the company revealed on Tuesday, announcing that nearly 3 million units have been sold. The company also unveiled its latest addition to the line, the sleek W950i.

The dark purple-colored phone will run on the Symbian operating system and will be UMTS-capable for connectivity to high-speed networks. A touch screen provides easy access to music files and 4GB of flash memory storage would put it in line with Apple's iPod Nano.

While the focus of the W950i Walkman phone is entertainment, Sony Ericsson said its choice of the Symbian OS would also make it useful in business applications. A multitude of third party programs are available for the operating system, which has long been offered by rival Nokia.

The phone would be the manufacturer's third to be based on the popular smartphone OS this year.

As with most of the Walkman phones, no announcement of a U.S. model has been made. Two versions would be available initially: one for Europe, Asia Pacific, the Middle East and Africa, and another for China dependent on the availability of 3G services.

The W950i will come with Disc2Phone, a software application that would allow a user to transfer music from the PC, and supports the capability to be used with a cellular carrier's direct download services.

Sony Ericsson said the W950i would be released in the third quarter of this year at a price of 300 to 400 euros ($350 to $450 USD).

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

Remember the Clie? Looks like the Clie with the Palm OS changed to Symbian and the phone function added. The little scroll wheel on the side is the same too. That is one function every small device should have. However its Sony, I wont be using it.

Score: 0

|

My God...

plays just about anything I'd want it to, 3G, SymbianOS.

Yum.

Too bad though....

"No announcement of a U.S. model has been made."

And I'm sure they'll hack all the good s*** out of it before it gets to the states.

Score: 0

|

Lets hope you don't have to use the horrendous Connect software to manage the music on it..

Score: 0

|

It doesn't have a camera, anyone noticed?

Score: 0

|

I'm glad. Unless they put a really good camera in it, i don't care. This way the phone can be really slim.

Score: 0

|

I think they're trying to ditch the camera phone concept here with the W series and really emphasize the phone's MP3 player capabilities. That's why, IMO.

Score: 0

|

Does it have PTT?

Score: 0

|

It's nice to see the jogdial making a comeback. From the photo it looks like even the buttons are touch sensitive.

But as with many phones these days, I'm not sure if I want to be stuck with using their proprietary port connected headset to listen to music.

Score: 0

|

Looks very nice & I need a new phone too.

Score: 0

|

Wow, what an awesome phone! Too bad it won't be compatible with Verizon huh...

Score: 0

|

4 gb of flash memory eh? i'm interested now. wonder how well it syncs to outlook.

Score: 0

|

The best cell design ever, imho. O_O

Maybe my next cell, btw, anybody know which music format will be supported?

Score: 0

|

I have the W600i and it reads pretty much any format except wma :(

Score: 0

|

Sounds perfect. Reads all the formats people in the know would actually use, while keeping it from kids who are better off without. :P

Score: 0

|

However, it's Sony. Too bad.

Score: 0

|

Agreed, suh.

Score: 0

|

But it's also an Ericsson :) (SonyEricsson is a free standing company owned 50% by the Swedish mobile company Ericsson and 50 % by Sony I think)

Score: 0

|

Why?? Still beats Motorola.

Score: 0

|

PDC 2009: What have we learned this week?

There was the freebie that no one will forget, the heebie-jeebies courtesy of Scott Guthrie, and a teensy bit clearer picture of how this cloud thingie should work.

Live report: Will Google Chrome OS change Linux?

The mysteries of just what Chrome OS is, and how much of an operating system it truly is, may be resolved today.

PDC 2009: Microsoft cares about Web browser performance

The effort to give users of the world's dominant Web browser the impression of quality, is a personal one for the man who leads that battle.

Nokia re-affirms its commitment to Symbian, sort of

Maemo won't necessarily be replacing Symbian in the Nokia N-Series, but that's definitely a place where it will be found.

E-book readers will be in short supply this holiday season

E-readers are hot this year, and a lot of compelling new products have been released, but are there enough electrophoretic displays to go around?

Sony looks to finally open a single storefront for downloads

Sony has had many different download portals for movies, music, e-books, and games, and now it's looking to make a single shop for all of it.

Tuning out the tablet: Time to give the endless speculation a rest

Wide Angle Zoom: Wishing and hoping and thinking and praying....won't put an iTablet on the market.

Five improvements for IT managers in 2010

If businesses are to improve their efficiency for next year, they need to stop and reassess the basic tenets of their job.

AOL's spinoff from Time Warner to shed 2,500 jobs

As AOL moves toward become an independent company again, it will cut nearly a third of its workforce.

Gartner: SMS-based money transfer will be bigger than mobile browsing, search

Gartner issues its predictions for the 10 things our phones will be doing in 2012.

Don't forget to upgrade to Firefox 3.6 beta 3 today

Mozilla has released the latest beta its Firefox 3.6 browser software, just over one week after beta 2.