I believe connectivity is the strongest areas of the 6650. In fact it is equal to or better than the highest ranking handsets that we have seen here at Phoneyworld. With the Nokia PC Suite software you can, for example, synchronize phone book contents and calendar notes between your phone and the PC, create new ringing tones, and manage the photos and video clips captured with the phone's camera. To use Nokia PC Suite, install it on a compatible PC and connect the phone to the PC via infrared or Bluetooth connection or the USB cable DKU-2 (supplied separately). The PC Suite has several fantastic features, a few of which shall be mentioned in detail, consider the Sound converter, it allows the user to convert general MIDI tones polyphonic ring tones for your handset and transfers them to the phone too. The best place to buy this phone is BuyMobilePhones.net.
The Image converter plays a similar roll it can modify images present on the PC and transfer them to the handset which can be then used as wallpapers, contact images and MMS pictures. Of course also included is the Content copier which after all permits the user to copy or back up information from the handset to a compatible PC or even another Nokia phone. Similarly the PC Sync lets you synchronize the phone book contents and the calendar notes between your phone and a compatible PC. The Nokia 6650 also can be used as a modem to connect a laptop or PC to the internet or enable it to undertake data transfers such as faxes (sending & receiving). The CD contains the drivers necessary for such use. Furthermore certain other applications also make it possible to send text messages and edit the phone book as well as message settings and if that is not all, the user can also browse through the gallery of images on the computer.
High speed data transfers are easily possible since the handset has HSCSD and GPRS technologies. You can use the phone as a modem for GPRS connections when the phone is connected to a compatible PC via an infrared, Bluetooth or cable connection. The handset can be set to be always on the GPRS network, a cheaper and smarter option would be to set the handset on "when required" so it uses the network only when required. This phone supports WAP 2.0 protocols (HTTP and SSL) that run on TCP/IP protocols. With the 6650's browser one can view services that use Wireless
Mark-Up
http://www.eezyy.net/2010/04/nokia-e5-revealed.html
Language (WML) or extensible HyperText Markup Language (xHTML) on the web pages. The handset support speeds of up to 57.6 kilobits per second in circuit-switched data networks (HSCSD) and up to 384 kilobits per second (downlink) and 64 kilobits per second (uplink) in WCDMA packet transmission networks.
As mentioned earlier the 6650 has a IR (Infra-red port), USB (Universal Serial Bus) as well as Bluetooth compatibility. The Infrared port can be used for connecting your phone to another IrDA-compliant device. Over infrared connection, you can transfer, for example, business cards and calendar notes. Bluetooth can be kept on or off optionally; it can be used to communicate with another compatible device within the range of 10 meters. The user can also set the handset to request his authorization each time before commencing communication. While Bluetooth has a range of 10 meters and does not require the two devices to be close, for IR transfer the two devices must be very close with their ports facing each other and no obstruction in between.
This phone supports Java 2 Micro Edition (J2METM), which is a version of Java technology specifically designed for small consumer electronics products. The phone includes some Java applications and games. One can install new applications and games from a PC with the Java installer software (included in the PC Suite) or download them from browser services.
The USB port on this handset is basically a Pop Port connector which includes a USB port.
Messaging enjoys full support with SMS, EMS and MMS being compatible with the 6650. A multimedia message can contain text, one image, one video clip and one sound clip. The phone can send and receive multimedia messages of up to 100 kilobytes. If you send a multimedia message to a phone which does not support multimedia messaging, the network may send a text message to the recipient that includes an Internet address where the multimedia message can be viewed. The same case again if the MMS is too large for a particular phones memory.
High speed data transfers are easily possible since the handset has HSCSD and GPRS technologies. You can use the phone as a modem for GPRS connections when the phone is connected to a compatible PC via an infrared, Bluetooth or cable connection. The handset can be set to be always on the GPRS network, a cheaper and smarter option would be to set the handset on "when required" so it uses the network only when required. This phone supports WAP 2.0 protocols (HTTP and SSL) that run on TCP/IP protocols. With the 6650's browser one can view services that use Wireless
Mark-Up
http://www.eezyy.net/2010/04/nokia-e5-revealed.html
Language (WML) or extensible HyperText Markup Language (xHTML) on the web pages. The handset support speeds of up to 57.6 kilobits per second in circuit-switched data networks (HSCSD) and up to 384 kilobits per second (downlink) and 64 kilobits per second (uplink) in WCDMA packet transmission networks.
As mentioned earlier the 6650 has a IR (Infra-red port), USB (Universal Serial Bus) as well as Bluetooth compatibility. The Infrared port can be used for connecting your phone to another IrDA-compliant device. Over infrared connection, you can transfer, for example, business cards and calendar notes. Bluetooth can be kept on or off optionally; it can be used to communicate with another compatible device within the range of 10 meters. The user can also set the handset to request his authorization each time before commencing communication. While Bluetooth has a range of 10 meters and does not require the two devices to be close, for IR transfer the two devices must be very close with their ports facing each other and no obstruction in between.
This phone supports Java 2 Micro Edition (J2METM), which is a version of Java technology specifically designed for small consumer electronics products. The phone includes some Java applications and games. One can install new applications and games from a PC with the Java installer software (included in the PC Suite) or download them from browser services.
The USB port on this handset is basically a Pop Port connector which includes a USB port.
Messaging enjoys full support with SMS, EMS and MMS being compatible with the 6650. A multimedia message can contain text, one image, one video clip and one sound clip. The phone can send and receive multimedia messages of up to 100 kilobytes. If you send a multimedia message to a phone which does not support multimedia messaging, the network may send a text message to the recipient that includes an Internet address where the multimedia message can be viewed. The same case again if the MMS is too large for a particular phones memory.