Wednesday, July 21, 2010

NOKIA C3


All you need to stay in touch

Nokia C3 brings you closer to your friends and online communities with easy messaging features and a fast, reliable internet connection.


Home screen

  • Make it your own by changing the background, theme and icons.
  • Get live Facebook and Twitter feeds right on your home screen.
  • Keep in touch with friends – simply select their picture to call or send a message.
  • Manage your email, chat, calendar and music with dedicated widgets/shortcuts on your home screen.

Contents:

Design

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Dimensions
  • Dimensions: 115.5 x 58.1 x 13.6 mm
  • Weight (with battery): 114 g
  • Volume: 63.2 cc
Product dimensions
Display and user interface
  • Size: 2.4"
  • Resolution: 320 x 240 pixels (TFT)
  • 262,000 colours
  • Landscape QVGA
Colours
  • Available colours:
    • Slate Grey
    • Hot Pink
    • Golden White
Colour selection is dependent on sale region.
Personalisation
  • Customisable home screen:
    • widgets/shortcuts
    • themes
    • shortcuts
  • Ringtones: AAC, eAAC+, MP3, WMA, MIDI
  • Video ringtones
  • Themes
    • wallpapers
    • ringtones
    • pre-installed themes
  • Landscape QVGA
Keys and input methods
  • QWERTY keyboard
  • Dedicated messaging and contacts keys

Hardware

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Power Management
  • BL-5J 1320 mAh Li-Ion battery
  • Talk time (maximum):
    • 7 hrs
  • Standby time (maximum):
    • 800 hrs
  • Music playback time (Flight mode, maximum): 30 hours
Operation times may vary depending on radio access technology used, operator network configuration and usage.
Memory
  • MicroSD memory card slot, hot swappable, up to 8 GB
  • Internal memory: 55 MB
Operating frequency
  • Quad band EGSM 850/900/1800/1900
  • Automatic switching between GSM bands
  • Flight mode
Data network
  • GPRS class A, multislot class 32, maximum speed 85.6/64.2 kbps (DL/UL)
  • EGPRS class A, multislot class 32, maximum speed 236.8/118.4 kbps (DL/UL)
  • WLAN IEEE 802.11b/g, maximum speed up to 11 Mbps/54 Mbps
  • TCP/IP support
  • Capability to serve as data modem
Requires data service. Data Services may not be available in all networks. Data transmission speeds may be as high as 236.8 kbps, but may vary based upon network capabilities and other conditions. The establishment and continuation of a data connection depends on network availability, provider support and signal strength.
Connectivity
  • 2.0 mm Charger Connector
  • Bluetooth version 2.1 with Enhanced Data Rate
  • Support for local synchronisation
  • High-Speed USB 2.0 (micro USB connector)
  • 3.5 mm AV connector

Software & Applications

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Software platform & user interface
  • Series 40
  • FOTA (firmware update over the air)
  • Software updates through Nokia Software Updater installed on PC
Applications
  • Nokia Messaging Service 3.0 for Email
  • Nokia Messaging Service 3.0 Chat
  • Nokia Messaging Service 3.0 Communities
Personal Information Management (PIM)
  • Detailed contact information
  • Calendar
  • To-do list
  • Notes
  • Recorder
  • Calculator
  • Clock
  • Converter

Communications

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Email and messaging
  • Easy access to your email accounts, including Yahoo!® Mail, Gmail™, Windows Live™, Hotmail™ and other popular POP/IMAP services
  • Easy Ovi Mail free email account creation directly from phone
  • Instant messaging through Windows Live Messenger™, Yahoo!® Messenger, Google Talk™ and Ovi Chat
  • Conversational SMS for chat-style text messages
  • SMS, MMS
  • Nokia Xpress audio messaging
Call management
  • Contacts: up to 1,000 entries
  • Speed dialling
  • Logs of dialled, received and missed calls

Sharing & Internet

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Browsing and internet
  • Web browsing of real web pages through Nokia OSS web browser
  • JavaScript version 1.3 and 1.5
  • ECMAScript support
  • CSS support
  • OMA DRM version 2.0
  • Supported mark-up languages: HTML, XHTML, WML
  • Supported protocols: HTTP, WAP
  • TCP/IP support
  • Included Opera Mini browser optimises web page rending for mobile devices
  • Web Search
  • Communities widget on home screen shows live feeds from Facebook and Twitter

Photography

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Camera
  • 2 megapixel camera (1600 x 1200 pixels)
  • Still image formats: JPEG
  • Zoom up to 4x (digital)
  • Fullscreen viewfinder
  • Self timer
  • Effects in viewfinder: greyscale, sepia and negative
Other
  • 55 MB internal memory, expandable to up to 8 GB with microSD card
  • High-speed USB 2.0 connectivity
  • Bluetooth 2.1 EDR wireless connectivity

Video camera
  • 2 megapixel
  • Video clip length: up to capacity of memory card
  • Settings for scene, video light, white balance, colour tone
  • Zoom up to 4 x digital
Video codecs & formats
  • Video capture in MPEG-4, QCIF max. resolution 320 x 240
  • Video file format: H.263, H.264, AVI, MPEG-4 (stored as .mpg or .3gp files), WMV
Video sharing and playback
  • Support for download and streaming

Music & audio

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Music features
  • Nokia Music Player
  • Music codecs: .MP3, WMA, AAC, eAAC, eAAC+
  • 3.5 mm stereo headphone plug
  • Ringtones: mp3, aac, 64-tone polyphonic
Radio
  • Stereo FM radio (87.5-108 MHz/76-90 MHz), RDS

Gaming

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Gaming
  • Included games
    • Bounce
    • Sudoku
    • Block'd
    • Diamond Rush
Availability of games dependent upon sales region.

Environmental features

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Energy efficiency
  • Unplug charger reminder
Eco content and services
  • Available at Ovi, preinstalled eco wallpapers
Materials
  • Free of PVC, free of nickel on the product surface, free of brominated & chlorinated compounds and free of antimony trioxide as defined in Nokia Substance List
Recycling
  • All materials of the device can be recovered as materials and energy
Packaging
  • Made of renewable, up to 57 % recycled material. 100 % recyclable, reduced flat package size
User guide
  • Black & white printing, eco tips on Green Page

Package contents

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Standard Sales Package
  • Nokia C3
  • Nokia Battery BL-5J
  • Nokia Compact Charger AC-3
  • Nokia Stereo Headset WH-102
  • User guide

Accessories

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Recommended accessories
  • Nokia Bluetooth Headset BH-108
  • Nokia Bluetooth Stereo Headset BH-214
  • Nokia 8 GB micro SDHC Card MU-43
Compatible accessories Using Nokia or other consumer internet services with your mobile device may involve transferring large amounts of data. Your service provider may charge for the data transmission. The availability of particular products, services, and features may vary by region. Please check with your local Nokia dealer for further details and availability of language options. These specifications are subject to change without notice. SAR Eco-declaration Declaration of conformity
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Links DevicesNokia N77

Catch it live! With the Nokia N77 multimedia computer and live mobile TV based on DVB-H, it's primetime in your pocket.

Key mobile TV features:

DVB-H receiver (470-750MHz)
Dedicated TV application for selection, purchase and consumption of TV programs
Replay of TV program (up to 30 seconds) and a reminder setting via Program Guide
Mobile TV interactive services
Active matrix 2.4" QVGA color display with wide viewing angle: 320 x 240 pixels, up to 16 million colors
See the full Nokia N77 product specifications »

Nokia N92

The Nokia N92 is the first-ever commercial Nokia mobile TV device dedicated to viewing and storing mobile broadcast content, as well as accessing interactive services.


Key mobile TV features:

DVB-H receiver (470-750MHz)
Video / Audio codecs: H.264 AVC 384kbps@QVGA 15fps/QCIF 30fps and AAC up to 128 kbps)
Mobile TV application for selection, purchase, consumption, and storage of TV programs
Support for interactive services
Mobile TV electronic service guide
Channel and content protection: OMA DRM 2.0, IPSec rel. w IPv6, IPv6 scalable multicast
Large, 2.8" up to 16 million color display (QVGA 320 x 240 resolution)
Fold, twist, and stand design and dedicated media keys
Up to 5 hours watch time, stereo speakers, memory card support up to 2GB
See the full Nokia N92 product specifications »
More about Nokia N77

Nokia N77 fact sheet »
(PDF file, 0.1 MB) February 2007

Nokia N77 pictures »

Nokia N77 product pages »

Nokia N77 video »

Nokia N77 press release »



More about Nokia N92

Nokia N92 fact sheet
(PDF file, 0.1 MB) September 2006

Nokia N92: One device, many opportunities
(PDF file, 1.3 MB) November 2006
Main
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Devices
Mobile Broadcast Solution
Nokia Media Charger
Brochure: Mobile TV »
IP Datacast Terminals: Description of Implementation Principles »

More downloads » April 16, 2007
Samsung and Nokia to Cooperate on Mobile TV Interoperability »

April 12, 2007
Leading mobile companies to endorse common mobile TV implementation based on OMA BCAST »

February 12, 2007
Nokia N77: Live TV when you want it »

February 9, 2007
Mobile Broadcast Solution 3.2 » Read the latest Newsletter »

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Friday, May 25, 2007

Catch it live! With the Nokia N77 multimedia computer and live mobile TV based on DVB-H, it's primetime in your pocket.

Key mobile TV features:

DVB-H receiver (470-750MHz)
Dedicated TV application for selection, purchase and consumption of TV programs
Replay of TV program (up to 30 seconds) and a reminder setting via Program Guide
Mobile TV interactive services Catch it live! With the Nokia N77 multimedia computer and live mobile TV based on DVB-H, it's primetime in your pocket.

Key mobile TV features:

DVB-H receiver (470-750MHz)
Dedicated TV application for selection, purchase and consumption of TV programs
Replay of TV program (up to 30 seconds) and a reminder setting via Program Guide
Mobile TV interactive services
Active matrix 2.4" QVGA color display with wide viewing angle: 320 x 240 pixels, up to 16 million colors
See the full Nokia N77 product specifications »

Nokia N92


The Nokia N92 is the first-ever commercial Nokia mobile TV device dedicated to viewing and storing mobile broadcast content, as well as accessing interactive services.


Key mobile TV features:

DVB-H receiver (470-750MHz)
Video / Audio codecs: H.264 AVC 384kbps@QVGA 15fps/QCIF 30fps and AAC up to 128 kbps)
Mobile TV application for selection, purchase, consumption, and storage of TV programs
Support for interactive services
Mobile TV electronic service guide
Channel and content protection: OMA DRM 2.0, IPSec rel. w IPv6, IPv6 scalable multicast
Large, 2.8" up to 16 million color display (QVGA 320 x 240 resolution)
Fold, twist, and stand design and dedicated media keys
Up to 5 hours watch time, stereo speakers, memory card support up to 2GB
See the full Nokia N92 product specifications »
More about Nokia N77

Nokia N77 fact sheet »
(PDF file, 0.1 MB) February 2007

Nokia N77 pictures »

Nokia N77 product pages »

Nokia N77 video »

Nokia N77 press release »



More about Nokia N92

Nokia N92 fact sheet
(PDF file, 0.1 MB) September 2006

Nokia N92: One device, many opportunities
(PDF file, 1.3 MB) November 2006

Active matrix 2.4" QVGA color display with wide viewing angle: 320 x 240 pixels, up to 16 million colors
See the full Nokia N77 product specifications »

Nokia N92

The Nokia N92 is the first-ever commercial Nokia mobile TV device dedicated to viewing and storing mobile broadcast content, as well as accessing interactive services.


Key mobile TV features:

DVB-H receiver (470-750MHz)
Video / Audio codecs: H.264 AVC 384kbps@QVGA 15fps/QCIF 30fps and AAC up to 128 kbps)
Mobile TV application for selection, purchase, consumption, and storage of TV programs
Support for interactive services
Mobile TV electronic service guide
Channel and content protection: OMA DRM 2.0, IPSec rel. w IPv6, IPv6 scalable multicast
Large, 2.8" up to 16 million color display (QVGA 320 x 240 resolution)
Fold, twist, and stand design and dedicated media keys
Up to 5 hours watch time, stereo speakers, memory card support up to 2GB
See the full Nokia N92 product specifications »
More about Nokia N77

Nokia N77 fact sheet »
(PDF file, 0.1 MB) February 2007

Nokia N77 pictures »

Nokia N77 product pages »

Nokia N77 video »

Nokia N77 press release »Catch it live! With the Nokia N77 multimedia computer and live mobile TV based on DVB-H, it's primetime in your pocket.

Key mobile TV features:

DVB-H receiver (470-750MHz)
Dedicated TV application for selection, purchase and consumption of TV programs
Replay of TV program (up to 30 seconds) and a reminder setting via Program Guide
Mobile TV interactive services
Active matrix 2.4" QVGA color display with wide viewing angle: 320 x 240 pixels, up to 16 million colors
See the full Nokia N77 product specifications »

Nokia N92

The Nokia N92 is the first-ever commercial Nokia mobile TV device dedicated to viewing and storing mobile broadcast content, as well as accessing interactive services.


Key mobile TV features:

DVB-H receiver (470-750MHz)
Video / Audio codecs: H.264 AVC 384kbps@QVGA 15fps/QCIF 30fps and AAC up to 128 kbps)
Mobile TV application for selection, purchase, consumption, and storage of TV programs
Support for interactive services
Mobile TV electronic service guide
Channel and content protection: OMA DRM 2.0, IPSec rel. w IPv6, IPv6 scalable multicast
Large, 2.8" up to 16 million color display (QVGA 320 x 240 resolution)
Fold, twist, and stand design and dedicated media keys
Up to 5 hours watch time, stereo speakers, memory card support up to 2GB
See the full Nokia N92 product specifications »
More about Nokia N77

Nokia N77 fact sheet »
(PDF file, 0.1 MB) February 2007

Nokia N77 pictures »

Nokia N77 product pages »

Nokia N77 video »

Nokia N77 press release »



More about Nokia N92

Nokia N92 fact sheet
(PDF file, 0.1 MB) September 2006

Nokia N92: One device, many opportunities
(PDF file, 1.3 MB) November 2006




More about Nokia N92

Nokia N92 fact sheet
(PDF file, 0.1 MB) September 2006

Nokia N92: One device, many opportunities
(PDF file, 1.3 MB) November 2006

Saturday, September 30, 2006




What people are saying...
"I never had in the last 5 years such service as provided by your company... It is a great deal to get cash for old cell phone. What a pleasure...many thanks," - M.J., PA
"Dear SimplySellular: George and I received our check today for our used cell phones. Thank you for your prompt and promised service. Now that we know how you conduct your business, we will spread the work to our friends, colleagues and neighbors that you are trustworthy to do business with. Thank you again," - George and Sally, IL




An intranet promised to give Wang's salespeople everything they dreamed of. But getting one built required the biggest sales job yet.
By Cheryl Dahle Ralph Jordan has what several people on the Knowledge Exchange team describe as a "presence." He speaks with a quiet confidence that implies not only that he is right but that he knows his listener will come to agree. "You can take a negative experience, which is a problem, and turn it into a positive experience if you fix it quickly and you communicate." -Ralph Jordan Before long, even the sales reps, who were known for their skepticism, were won over by the system's benefits. Finding it Online
BBN Corp.(http://www.bbn.com/
IBM Corp.(http://www.ibm.com/
Informix Software Inc.(http://www.informix.com/infmx-cgi/Webdriver
Lotus Development Corp.(http://www.lotus.com/)
Microsoft Corp.(http://www.microsoft.com/)
Wang Laboratories Inc.(http://www.wang.com/)


Not everyone appreciates the value of a clean, crisp original document. Wang Software’s Jeff Hausdorf is someone who did, and he took excellent care of his hoard of fresh-from-the-printer sales materials. Hausdorf, Wang’s Southeast District partner development manager, knew you couldn’t pitch a new customer using product data sheets with blobby letters and photocopied lint bits so big that the page looked like a Rorschach test. So he encased his originals in plastic sleeves and stored them on a special shelf in his home office. He could sometimes make do with an exceptionally good first copy (stored on the next shelf down) by spending some quality time with a bottle of white-out. The thing Hausdorf dreaded most was trying to find a new original. At Wang corporate headquarters in Billerica, Mass., it could take a week or two to locate the person who could deliver the document he needed. While Hausdorf queued up in the Wang information bread line, hungry customers went to competitors. "You were dependent on how good a filing system you kept," Hausdorf says. "And if you didn’t know about the existence of a particular data sheet, there was no way you were going to find out about it. You just missed out."
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That was just the beginning. Field reps couldn’t get their e-mail, let alone log onto the company mainframe to access the meager collection of poorly labeled, outdated documents there. Sales support people were constantly tied up on the phone with reps who were pleading for information. All in all, it was a frustrating exercise, and it was particularly embarrassing because the product that all of this dysfunction was trying to sell was workflow software—tools to help other companies get a handle on their processes. In part, the difficulties were a by-product of a sales model that necessity built. When Wang Software’s parent company, Wang Laboratories Inc., emerged from bankruptcy in September 1993, it had shed more than $1.3 billion in debt as well as 7,000 employees and virtually all of its market credibility. After the reorganization, Wang Software was reborn as a lean and hungry new business unit—with few sales people and even fewer sales offices. But by 1994 the field sales and sales support force had grown to 150 people, all of whom had complaints about the information rationing. What Wang executives finally did in response changed not only the way sales reps sold but the way the software business unit produced and distributed information. Pulling off that kind of shift in collective thinking wasn’t easy. It was harder than trying to teach an old dog new tricks. It was like trying to resurrect Old Yeller and get him to polka. ‘X’ Marks the Spot Oct. 9, 1994. That was the day Ralph Jordan, director of sales operations at Wang Software, decided that the information problem child was his to adopt. He called a meeting in the old Wang Towers in Lowell, Mass., with project manager Neena Mathur, and together they listed the new system’s goals: to allow the field to get information it needed, when it needed it, from corporate and to let the field share its experience troubleshooting and selling with peers and the company. They also drew up a list of requirements: that people be able to get information whenever they want it and in a form that they can use; that the system be compatible with the technology of the sales force and business partners, such as Big Six firms and systems integrators; that the information be up-to-date all the time, with no pileup in the in-box; and that the interface be easy enough so as to make training superfluous. Jordan approached the whiteboard and drew a "V" with the open end facing left to indicate information traveling away from the company. Then he drew a mirror image of the "V" next to it, apexes joined, to represent information coming in from the field. He circled the "X" intersection of the two. "This is the point where you have perfect knowledge," he told the others. And so the idea for the Wang Knowledge Exchange intranet was born. Ralph Jordan has what several people on the Knowledge Exchange team describe as a "presence." He speaks with a quiet confidence that implies not only that he is right but that he knows his listener will come to agree. For that reason, he makes an ideal evangelist for new and not-entirely-proven solutions. That was a good thing, because as the project team considered the requirements for the new system, World Wide Web technology emerged as the most likely salvation. Jordan knew that a project as far-reaching and demanding as a corporate intranet would need executive sponsorship. First, he talked to his boss, Steve Quehl, senior vice president of field operations, about the options the project team was discussing. He even gave Quehl brief demonstration of what the Internet could do. It turns out that Jordan wasn’t Quehl’s only mentor; his children were also making the case for cyberspace, using the Net to research their homework. "I suppose I linked the concept of what my children were doing to what salespeople would need on a day-to-day basis to get their jobs done," says Quehl. "Once I got sold, it was a matter of painting the vision for other people who could see past the costs of putting this in place and focus on more of the benefits." So Quehl began selling the project to the top brass—which included William Everett, vice president of finance, David Goulden, senior vice president for business development, and eventually the new president of Wang Software, Robert Weiler, who signed on in December 1995. Jordan also knew he had to whip up some rank-and-file enthusiasm about the potential of the Knowledge Exchange if he expected people to embrace the extra work that such an information-sharing system would require. "At this point this was ‘Ralph Jordan's Program,’" Jordan recalls. "And, well, it wasn’t going to be successful as Ralph Jordan's Program. So I had to extend the ownership. And you do that by bringing people in early on and keeping them in." All told, about 22 people were involved in various curves of the loop, although the core team was limited to about 10. Resistance and Persistence

Saturday, September 23, 2006


Mobile phone, Nokia 7610
Nokia 7610 Imaging PhoneMegapixel camera for quality printing Up to 10 minutes video recording Movie Director application for automated fun video production 8 MB internal dynamic memory with 64 MB Reduced Size MultiMediaCard (MMC) Mobile Internet browsing
Key Features Integrated megapixel (1152 x 864 pixels) camera with 4x digital zoom for quality prints Integrated video recorder with audio function and 4x digital zoom for video clips up to 10 minutes long RealOne Player Standard and night camera modes and self-timer Movie Director - Combine video clips, add music, or change styles Created and downloaded digital content (images, sounds, videos) with Gallery storage Welcome Demo for a quick start as well as a Help application that guides you through your phone's many features. 65,536 color-display, 176 x 208 pixels Bluetooth wireless technology and USB connectivity MMS, email, and Instant Messaging Advanced XHTML browser Personalized user interface themes Nokia Xpress-on? Style Packs Full Specifications
Tri-band Operation Tri-band coverage on up to five continents (GSM 900/1800/1900 or GSM 850/1800/1900) Automatic switching between bands
Size Weight: 118 g Dimensions: 108.6 mm x 53 mm x 18.7 mm, 93.5 cc
Integrated Digital Megapixel Camera Resolution 1152 x 864 pixels 4x digital zoom Picture modes: Standard, night Self timer Displayed formats: JPEG, GIF87a/89a, EXIF, DCF, WBMP, BMP, MBM, PNG

Nokia 7380 Review

The Bottom Line
Reserved only to very stylish people. Others may prefer to get a less beautiful normal phone and hide it.
Pros
Good speakerphone and earpiece sound quality
Exceptional design
Cons
Spinner wheel makes navigation easy but text and number entry painful
zSB(3,3)
Description
Technology: GSM
No keypad, text and number entry is done using a spinner wheel.
Bluetooth support
Here is the story of a love-hate relationship. The Nokia 7380 is a phone I would have loved to love, but had to hate-love. Beautiful, no bigger than a Milky Way(tm) chocalate bar, and so relatively well balanced with a decent camera, a radio player and even Bluetooth. I'm not a refined lady -- the target market for that lipstick-shaped phone sold in Holt Renfrew luxury stores in Canada -- but people were still turning heads on me. However, using the Nokia 7380 requires skills since there is no keypad, just a spinner wheel to select numbers, a concept introduced last year in the Nokia 7280, painstaking and made necessary for style's sake. Yet, this time I kept the 7380 for more than a month and I almost grew used to it. But why didn't they include number voice dialing, a technology that has been around since 2004 and that allows, not only to dictate names but numbers.
Other than that, the Nokia 7380 is great: A crocodile skin leather back cover; The front is a full mirror that reveals the display only when you use it. The VGA camera is good and sound quality is surprisingly good enough for such a small design, both in handset and speakerphone mode. Text entry is a challenge without a keypad but the method they developped at least brings up the most likely letters first to make things faster -- but it occasionally fails. Yet, the Nokia 7380 is for people who need to be stylish at all expense. Others should choose ugly and functional regular phones.

AT&T Wireless

Cingular promised to provide uninterrupted service to AT&T Wireless customers when it acquired that company in 2004, but instead it nickel-and-dimed them and degraded their reception in an effort to persuade them to sign new contracts, according to a federal lawsuit filed on behalf of those customers. The lawsuit claims consumers faced excessive fees, poor service, dropped calls and a network that has not been maintained, part of a campaign to push former AT&T Wireless