Отзывы о Мобильный Телефон Nokia 225
475 отзывов пользователей o Nokia 225
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Nokia 225?
Поделитесь своим опытом и помогите другим сделать правильный выбор
Cosas buenas:
- Tamaño pequeño. Diseño sólido.
- Tiene radio sin necesidad de conectar auriculares.
- Reproductor de MP3 básico.
- He podido escuchar MP3 conectando audio bluetooth.
- Conexión 3G/4G por si necesitas mirar algo básico en el navegador que trae (Ojo! Navegador inservible para webs tipo multimedia, pero te puede sacar de un apuro si quieres buscar algo en google).
- USB 2.0 por si necesitas transferir algunos datos en modo almacenamiento.
Cosas malas:
- La radio no funciona a través del Audio Bluetooth (¿bug o limitación técnica?).
- El volumen del reproductor MP3 es realmente bajo a través del audio bluetooth.
- No tiene botones de volumen, tienes que entrar en la aplicación si quieres subir/bajar el volumen.
- Las opciones de configuración son escasas. No puedes cambiar el tamaño de la letra, ni definir perfiles de sonido (por ejemplo, para poner el móvil en silencio o en vibración, hay que ir a los ajustes de sonido). Lo curioso es que en otros móviles más antiguos con el sistema S30+ (por ejemplo, en el Nokia 5310) sí puedes cambiar el tamaño de letra y definir perfiles de sonido.
- El navegador Opera te muestra anuncios entre enlace y enlace.
- Viene lleno de juegos a los que no puedes jugar sin pagar, y no puedes borrar.
La batería del teléfono sólo dura unas 2 horas de llamadas. No se puede usar el dial pagado cuando se está en una llamada para seleccionar un proceso automatizado. ¿El volumen sólo llega hasta el 9? ¿Qué compañía tiene un control de volumen que termina en 9? La marca Nokia ya no vale nada, al igual que los teléfonos Nokia que se venden hoy en día. La única razón por la que le he dado 2 estrellas en lugar de 1 es que realmente se puede grabar ambos lados de una llamada telefónica con este dispositivo. Algo que es muy raro de encontrar en Europa hoy en día.
su menu,muy basico siendo un movil 4G,no se pueden configurar los perfiles,no tiene atajos de teclado,
malo,lo he comprado de segunda mano por(18€),la bateria no dura mas de 2 dias siendo de 1100mah.
menos mal que me a costado poco.no valen el precio oficial de 60€!!! ni de co..ñ,siendo un movil 4G,lo
esperaba con algo mas de tecnologia.los nokia antiguos de cuarquier serie con symbian o series40 les dan
100.000,(como lo hecho en falta symbian series40)-vueltas,a estos moviles 4G,muy decepcionado,no unico bueno es que lleva bluetooth 5.0 y
lo puedo asociar a un altavoz portatil pequeño y escuchas musica,aunque su reproductor se malisismo.LO DICHO, NO VALEN LOS 60€ QUE OFICIALMENTE PONE EN LA PAGINA!!.con lo avanzados que estan los chinos en moviles y vendan este tipo de moviles con tecnologia deficiente es engañar al consumidor se de donde sea.
Lo recomiendo mucho.
Отлично подходит в качестве резервного телефона для телефонных звонков. Не ожидайте многого другого...
Llegó el equipo completo. Y se pudo utilizar en ese momento.
Solo falta en esperar algunos meses para verificar que tan buen producto es en el uso continuo.
Saludos
I started with a cheap Nokia phone and when that went bought another cheap phone.
The Nokia 1661.
Just swapped in the full size sim card from the old phone and was good to go.
With them doing away with the 2G and 3G networks I figured it just a matter of time before my phone would not work anymore. I assume it is a 2G phone. 3G at best.
Now you have to understand I just need a phone. I barely use it. Hate texting and don't need internet.
I just want to make and receive calls. Have voice mail pick up when I don't or can't answer the phone.
So I purchased this phone hoping the 4G network would be around for awhile.
But the first thing I did before I purchased the phone was go to a TMobile store and get a new sim card.
They were able to transfer my plan to a nano sim card which is what the Nokia 225 uses.
Which they did not charge me for by the way.
But with the "adapter" I was able to use the nano card in my old phone, which uses a full size sim card, until the new one arrived.
When it did I put the nano sim card in the phone and was good to go.
It got right on the TMobile network without me doing a thing.
Best I can tell I can make and receive calls.
I believe the phone to be running on a 4G LTE network cause the letters are there on the screen.
I could not really find answers to the questions I had about making this switch.
I figure there are still people out there like me who don't want a smart phone.
Few and far between though.
I figured if I documented my circumstances and what I did in detail maybe it will help the next person.
Battery life seems a little shorter then I think it should be seeing how I hardly use the phone and it is just sitting around when on. But not really that big a deal.
It is little bigger then my old and that is nice. Being older, wearing glasses, etc.
All in all I think I am going to be OK with this phone.
I only hope that the networks this phone uses will be around for awhile.
Cause I can't even begin to tell you how much I do not want a smart phone.
Twenty years ago I was using a Motorola T-mobile To Go Prepaid pay-as-you-go cell phone. Happy with it at the time... Buy $100 of prepaid minutes and get 'Gold Membership' so $.10 per minute and $.10 per text and you only have to put $10.00 once per YEAR to keep the phone active... zero monthly costs or minimums. Slightly more complicated than that, but those who know, know what I'm talking about.
Fifteen years ago, my employment give me a company phone that I can use for personal as well, so I give my T-mobile Gold Membership phone to my elderly mother to use as an emergency phone for travel or driving or power outtages. Just have to put on $10 per year and she has an active cell phone with great battery life (compared to modern smart phones). Life is good.
BUT, time passes and the phone and (old full size) SIM card are 2g, which all carriers but T-mobile have sunseted (like 3g phones), and T-mobile is slowly letting die. Service is getting spotty and will eventually go away, even if the phone is still perfectly functional. Mom needs a new phone, but she's tool old to figure out how to use a smartphone (not willing) and the battery on them will die in a day. Need a phone that just makes calls and the battery will last for a week or more plus uses the 4g network that will keep working when 2g goes away and that is this phone.
I looked over other choices and did LOTS of research... be careful since many other cheap phones may not have the T-mobile / USA GSM frequencies (others might only have foreign GSM). Also, some cheaper phones are just 2g phones, so watch out for that.
I needed a new nano-sim that I got from T-mobile (check that you are getting one for pre-paid... I read the post-paid accounts might use a different sim, but not sure about that). And I also read that you need a new sim as the old 2g sim cut to nano size will not work in a 4g phone or if it will will only work on whatever 2g network remains.
The phone is just like you remember the candy bar Nokia phones from 20 years ago to be. Not that that is necessarily a good thing in this easy to use smartphone world... but it makes calls and plays 'Snake'.
Good luck.






