Siemens S40

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The Siemens S40 is a mobile phone. Originally developed as the Bosch 1886 in 2000, the phone was branded as the Siemens S40 after Siemens acquired the

IrDA) on the phone or a USB or serial port data cable. Its more distinctive features include the voice memo recorder, the mute feature for conversations, the ability to record phone conversations, and the ringtone composer (a useful alternative for those unsatisfied with the 47 monophonic
ringtones).

In 2005, the phone made it onto CNET's list of ten lowest-radiation cell phones, at #10, with a SAR (specific absorption rate) of 0.33.[2]

The phone also supports

HSCSD, and T9
predictive text input.

The S40 includes a 104x64 pixel monochrome

liquid-crystal display
with a blue backlight, an internal antenna, and rubbery buttons to prevent accidental dialing.

Siemens S42

Phone was also branded as the Siemens S42, with the only differences being the keypad cover and a more rounded form factor.

References

  1. ^ "Siemens S40 Specs and Features". Phone Factor, LLC.
  2. ^ "Archive.org Wayback Machine: "CNET - Ten Lowest-Radiation Cell Phones (U.S.)"". CNET. Retrieved 2005-07-18.

External links