Sony Ericsson W580i

Sony Ericsson W580i
Manufacturer Sony Ericsson
Compatible networks
Availability by country
  • Hong Kong July, 2007
  • Canada August, 2007
  • United States October, 2007
Successor Sony Ericsson W595
Related
Form factor Compact Slider
Dimensions 3.9 × 1.8 × 0.5 in
99 × 47 × 14 mm
Weight 3.3 oz
94 g
Operating system Sony Ericsson proprietary OS
Memory 12 MB internal
Removable storage Memory Stick Micro (M2) (up to 8 GB)
Battery 900 mAh Li-Pol battery
Data inputs
Display 2" 262,144 TFT LCD
240 × 320 pixels
Rear camera 2.0 megapixel
Connectivity
  • Bluetooth (2.0)
  • USB (2.0 proprietary, and, for the memory stick, 2.0 mass storage device)

The Sony Ericsson W580i is a mid range slider style mobile phone in the Walkman series. The phone was announced on 26 March 2007 and was released in early August. It is a 2.5G Quad-band (850/900/1800/1900) GSM phone with EDGE capabilities and has a 2 megapixel camera. It comes in "Style White", "Boulevard Black", "Metro Pink", "Urban Grey", "Jungle Green" and "Velvet Red".

The phone made an appearance in Ciara and 50 Cent's music video, "Can't Leave 'Em Alone". It was also shown in the films You Don't Mess with the Zohan and Paul Blart: Mall Cop. The phone contains the ability to detect motion on a limited scale. For instance, the phone keeps track of how many steps the user has taken. The W580i has a special feature, Shake Control, which also makes use of motion sensing. When listening to music in the Walkman feature, depressing the Walkman button and subsequently shaking the phone will select a song at random.

The W580i is the predecessor to the Sony Ericsson W595, and related, non-Walkman equivalent is Sony Ericsson S500.

Specifications

Design

Entertainment

Communication

Connectivity

Networks

Internet

Memory

Messaging

Organizer

Special features

Battery

Included accessories

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.