Compatible with Cingular cell phone service, the Nokia 3595 is at the top end of Nokias entry-level 30 series phones, offering the basic Nokia features plus data capabilities through its Java support and advanced messaging. The Nokia 3595 phone comes in the familiar slim Nokia package, but has a larger and unique keypad design and a full 4,096-color display.
This device supports messaging via SMS and MMS, enabling you to create, send, edit, and forward messages with text and images to compatible phones. You can also receive messages with text, image, and sound, and instant message from friends or business associates. The GPRS connection ensures high-speed data transmission over the phone's XHTML browser, providing users with quick access to Internet. The 3959 is also compatible with the many downloadable, Java-based business applications available online.
For fun, the Nokia 3595 provides preloaded polyphonic ring tones, wallpapers, animated screen savers, and picture messages--plus the memory to download more. The device also features four games (Backgammon, Sky Diver, Air Glide, and Bowling), and changeable covers in various colors. The 500-contact phone book lets you assign up to five phone numbers and three text entries for each contact. Other standard organizational features include a calendar with up to 500 entries, a to-do list with up to 30 entries, and an alarm clock with snooze. The phone book, calendar, and to-do list can be synchronized with a PC using SyncML software over the WAP connection.
For hearing-impaired customers, the 3595 offers TTY/TDD (Telecommunication Device for the Deaf) compatibility with the phone adapter. The extended Li-Ion battery is rated for up to 5.5 hours of digital talk time and 10 days of digital standby time
1 Not Bad
I mean how can I complain... it was free with my service!
Overall it is not a bad phone... it has plenty of options like text messaging and all that fun stuff... It has voice dialing (you know when you just say the name and it calls the person) if you feel like setting that up... A nice address book feature that allows you to store several numbers under one name and label them with cute icons like a house for home phone and a little cell for mobile phones etc...
Sometimes it freezes up (kinda like computers) and you have to remove the battery to get it to work again!? What do you expect for free though?
Major complaint: WHERE'S SNAKE??? I miss it! But there is a cute bowling game on it!
It's a phone... it serves its purpose. It does not take pictures, but then again that's what cameras are for!
2 Nice Little Phone
I finally decided to go wireless in about June 0f 2004, and I signed on with Nokia and this little phone came with my plan. Although a small little phone, I was surprised at the large number of features that it had. It had a Lithium-Ion battery which lasted a relatively long time, and recharged very quickly, had the capability of sending SMS messages directly to other phones, of surfing the web (text-based due to the small display screen) and sending and receiving emails, and also functioned as a handy alarm clock and organizer. I was even able to chat in real time via Yahoo IM, AIM and ICQ with this phone. I never knew you could do so much with such a tiny device. The only minus in my book was that it was a bit small and I found my face was rather large to accomodate it and the small size I found rather awkward. If I get another it will probably be a flip phone. The phone had limited MMS capabilities, but that feature I would have found largely useless anyway.
One caveat to potential wireless customers, though . . . I think that most phones have these features nowadays and would concentrate more on the plan you enroll in than on the phone you get. I went over my minutes a few times and was shocked with irritatingly high and unexpected phone charges, so take it from me and take the time to get a plan that suits you and don't worry about the phone too much, unless you want it to be used as a walkie-talkie, MMS device or want to have some toy like the new Ngage phones that are MP3 players along with everything else. Another minus about this particular phone was that it had no obvious anti-virus software with it and although cyberterrorists haven't targeted mobile devices much thus far, it won't be long before viruses are as much of a threat on these devices as they are on Windows PC's and Macs. Anither minus was that there was no USB port to connect it up to my computer and easily share data, but as I assume this model is already obsolete, I don't think that matter much now. But it was a great little device for a beginner!
3 Not bad
I mean how can I complain... it was free with my service!
Overall it is not a bad phone... it has plenty of options like text messaging and all that fun stuff... It has voice dialing (you know when you just say the name and it calls the person) if you feel like setting that up... A nice address book feature that allows you to store several numbers under one name and label them with cute icons like a house for home phone and a little cell for mobile phones etc...
Sometimes it freezes up (kinda like computers) and you have to remove the battery to get it to work again!? What do you expect for free though?
Major complaint: WHERE'S SNAKE??? I miss it! But there is a cute bowling game on it!
It's a phone... it serves its purpose. It does not take pictures, but then again that's what cameras are for!
4 A decent phone by Nokia, but nothing special
This is a very good phone for anyone who is a Nokia fan or who doesn't want anything fancy. It will call people and receive calls. It has a color screen, downloadable ring tones and games, and has a decent audio quality. There is no camera or bluetooth or advanced organization tools. It is growing increasingly outdated and by a year from now hardly anybody will be using it anymore, but if you own this phone I wouldn't go running to throw it out just yet. It gets the job done, but isn't going to wow you in the process.
5 Finding a NOKIA mobile phone
Can I find a mobile phone type Nokia 2300. The latter has got a domestic radio feature. Please answer back.
6 Headset connection
The Nokia 3595 does not adapt to the standard 2.5mm headset plug. A search of Cingular, Jensen, Nokia and many others fails to locate an adapter. If you have a headset that you like to use, it probably will be useless with this phone. Typical indifference of manufacturers trying to force you to buy their products.
7 The high-end of the low-end entry level phone
I would like to preface my remarks with two points.
First, about a year ago, I finally got a cellular telephone because of the kids and their schedules. One of us is having to take them places or pick them up a few times each week, and the traffic around here is arguably the worst on the planet, creating some interesting delays nearly every day. And I admit that sometimes I have to call home from the grocery store because there will be 23 different verities of BBQ sauce and my list just says "BBQ sauce."
Second, my blood pressure soars when rude louts think they have the right to interrupt my lunch or dinner or infringe on my reading time in the doctor's waiting room to talk on their cell phones. I once saw a table of four people, each talking to an absent entity on his or her cell phone during an entire meal but not once talking with the real people beside or in front of them
Now, that said, the Nokia 3595 is apparently the high-end of the low-end entry level phone. That suits me fine. This silver-gray mass of wires and circuits has enough features to me going for some time. I didn't know that cell phones had all these whistles and bells such as games, voice tags for contacts, alarm clocks, caller ID, and such.
I like the fact that the contact list lets you have something like five numbers for up to 500 people. Five numbers per person---that's pretty crazy to me, the fact we have more phone numbers than we have people to use them! Why not run it up to eight numbers per contacts and bestow a full complement of eight phones to some octopi!
The battery lasts for more than five hours of solid talking, but there is not a soul on earth I want to talk with for five hours straight. The sound is decent though I have a certain amount of trouble talking into space while trying to hold this plastic rectangle close to my ear. I feel like my jaw is floating up and away from my face. (I guess that is why folks like those flip phones but they cost more than an infrequent talker like me is willing to spend.)
I was able to figure out most of the operating options, at least the ones I paid to get, without resulting to the manual, but I'm not sure if that is because the phone is intuitively designed or not. It may actually be because we are all moving toward some sort of collective consciousness that enables our species to share knowledge like those island monkeys that all started washing sweet potatoes once a certain percentage of their populations started washing the potatoes(In Transcendental Meditation, this phenomenon is termed the Maharishi Effect.)
The various stock wallpapers with the phone are pretty boring and tend to make it hard to read the small display window. (I cannot fathom why folks would want to send photos back and forth to devices with such poor video resolution.)
The manual that comes with this phone is OK, but the text designer could have done a much better job creating distinct, clear headings. I'm still sorting through some of the more humorous sections such as "Your WAP browser," "PUK codes," and "Potentially explosive atmospheres." (I cannot believe how many people are jawing away on a cell phone while pumping gas.)
This little sucker is nearly as tough as a hockey puck, too. I've dropped my on the pavement at least half a dozen times and once had to snap it back together after what looked to be a fatal plummet. Well, it's scratched and scarred a bit, but it still works just fine.
Well, I'm one of the masses now, no longer a cellular Luddite. If you see me walking down the street with a wire in my ear, gesturing wildly, and arguing with invisible beings, please help me!
8 cute phone for teenage girls!!
this is the best phone! i am 14 and have been wanting a cell phone forevr since my older sister got hers 4 years ago (she's 17 now) and so my dad left me with these words: Honey, if u can find a cell phone that works with cingular and is under 80 dollars, i will get it for you. So i found the Nokia 3595 and it is so cool. i can change the color of it whenever i want (right now its pink!), i can change the ringtone whenever i want, and i can IM my friends whenever i want... i think this is the best phone for a teenager that doesnt want to carry a big bulky phone around. All u parents out there, heres the best phone to get!!