The Nokia 210 offers you the easiest way to connect to the Internet and stay connected. Chat from morning till night, with up to 20 days of standby time from a single charge.
The Nokia 210 offers you the easiest way to connect to the Internet and stay connected. Chat from morning till night, with up to 20 days of standby time from a single charge.
The Nokia 210 offers you the easiest way to connect to the Internet and stay connected. Chat from morning till night, with up to 20 days of standby time from a single charge.
An easier life is just a tap away
The Nokia 210 offers the easiest way to connect to the Internet with the Opera Mini browser. It is fast, lightweight, and uses limited data – data you can use to share every moment of your life through the built-in camera and Facebook.
Relax in style
The Nokia 210 gives you many reasons to take a break. Download apps, ringtones, and more, play Snake and try out pre-installed games, or use the MP3 player and FM radio to relax.
Specially designed
Thanks to the standby time of up to 20 days, you are in touch with the world at any moment. With its colorful and durable polycarbonate casing, the Nokia 210 is built to be extremely resilient.
Specifications are collected from official manufacturer websites. Please verify the specifications before proceeding with your final purchase. If you notice any problem you can
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It is just what my elderly mother needs for a mobile phone. It has good signal and voices are clear on calls. It is not used for internet. It is also a very nice and user-friendly phone. For anything more you want, get a good smartphone.
I bought both and they both have a problem. One turns off by itself and the other has a problem with its battery, it only lasts in stand by mode without any calls for 2 days only
My father couldn't use it because the ringtone is excessively low even when it's at maximum volume. My father, who doesn't hear perfectly, almost never heard it. The truth is, I couldn't hear it either when there was a little noise (e.g. the TV a little louder).
Simple mobile with buttons. In the annoying number blacklist (which can hold up to 20 numbers), it would be good if it could block numbers with hiding, like in smartphones
Positive aspects: the long battery life. If the phone is simply left on for about 12 hours a day, it can exceed 15 days without charging. Of course, this is obvious for a new phone, but in order to reach the 20 days that are mentioned in the specifications, you just need to open it for checking and close it after 5 minutes.
The conversation is smooth, the speaker is fine, the screen is large and bright, and so far there have been no issues. It is a sleek and sturdy phone that does not slip from the hand, as I read in a previous comment.
Negative aspects: the ringtone volume is not loud enough. I had to try all the sound options - which cannot be heard even when the phone is next to you - to end up with the Nokia sound, which is somewhat audible. However, forget about it for use on the street or in the metro.
Messages: a frustrating story. Firstly, the notification sounds are the same as the ringtone sounds, so I was forced to use the Nokia sound. The problem is that when the phone rings, I jump to answer it because I don't know if it's an incoming call or a message. It's very tiring.
There is no sound notification as soon as the message is delivered. When this happens, it simply says "message delivered" without a ringtone. I am interested in knowing exactly when my messages are seen - if others are not interested, no problem. The worst part, however, is that there is no separate category for messages, incoming, outgoing, drafts, sent. The only option is "new message" and below it shows the messages exchanged with each recipient and their replies. If I want to selectively delete some messages from the same recipient, I do not have this capability. If I delete them, they will all disappear, which is unacceptable.
As for the rest, the radio does not pick up all the stations. We are talking about the stations we can pick up in Athens.
To open the phone's cover, you need help from an object. Either a small spoon, or a pen cap, or whatever suits you. Do not try to open it with your nail, it does not open. Forget about changing devices every now and then. Your cards will stay there, make up your mind.
As for the network selection, I consider it condemnable that it does not exist. I traveled to the Dodecanese, and the only network option was the Turkish companies, something that I encountered for the first time in the many years I have had mobile phones. Both Motorola, Ericsson, and Samsung phones that I have had for 12 years all have network selection. We go to "networks", "network selection", it gives us available options, local and Turkish networks, we choose our provider, and that's it. And not to cost us a fortune to make 5-6 necessary calls. If we assume that the previous complaints can somehow be overcome, this issue with the networks is an unforgivable omission on their part.
Fortunately, a few days after the purchase, the price increased by 5 euros, because we were ready to buy a second device.
For the money, it's okay. It has slots for 2 regular SIM cards, but when you use the phone for a call and someone calls you on the other number, it appears that the specific number is out of service. The ringtone is very loud only with the nostalgia option from the sound menu. The battery lasts quite a while if you don't use it excessively, but I can't specify exactly. The screen has satisfactory brightness and the font is good for those with presbyopia issues. It doesn't connect to wifi, only to G telephony, and it's not worth using for internet due to the small screen and lack of software. I've noticed that it slips out of my hands many times with any movement, and occasionally it has turned off on its own. Overall, it's only suitable for calls and messages.
Very good for someone elderly who struggles with smartphones. It is also recommended for someone who does not need the functions of smartphones daily and finds bulky smartphones uncomfortable, as it is very small in size and less bothersome in the pocket than smartphones. Its drawback is the relatively small battery (1020 mah), the Nokia 5310 2020 has a slightly larger battery at 1200 mah.
I got it for an elderly person who can't use smartphones. I would say that even though they had various Nokias for the past 15 years, they now struggled a bit with the menu that has changed in all the new Nokias. And that's because the right central menu on the screen is now for the camera (useless at this age) and other more essential options that the elderly person used to find easily are now removed. Now they have to search a bit more. Other than that: big screen & comfortable buttons, good battery life.
The speaker doesn't sound as loud as in other Nokia phones. It doesn't have a speaker and uses the earpiece for sound. It doesn't have a recording feature.
I got the gray...
In a few days it started to fade...
Maybe black is better.
Average phone, does its job without problems.
Internet connection, forget it...
I have it for 1 month, for Nokia... it is below average. And the worst part is its battery, which doesn't last 2 days with simple use, and if I talk a little more, I have to charge it every night. If I listen to the radio, then... after 2 - 3 hours, it needs to be charged. (even if it had alkaline batteries, it would last longer). Also, its plastic is very smooth and slips easily from the hands. The sound is good, the screen is clear, the menu is the familiar Nokia, it didn't give me any trouble, and finally, the games don't play unless you pay to download them. (who would pay to play Snake, etc?).