It was fiddly to use, had a terrible
screen and poor build quality - but the Siemens SL55
is certainly one of the cutest phones ever made.
Launched in 2003, the SL55 was probably the tiniest phone on the market, measuring just 82 x 45 x 22 mm and weighing 79 grams. But it wasn't just the small size of the SL55 that turned heads - the elegant combination of curves and styling details meant that this phone has a huge amount of "wow factor".. and the SL55 was making inroads into this marketplace a full year before Motorola's RAZR.
Launched in 2003, the SL55 was probably the tiniest phone on the market, measuring just 82 x 45 x 22 mm and weighing 79 grams. But it wasn't just the small size of the SL55 that turned heads - the elegant combination of curves and styling details meant that this phone has a huge amount of "wow factor".. and the SL55 was making inroads into this marketplace a full year before Motorola's RAZR.
The 101 x 80 pixel 4096 colour CSTN
display was a bit basic even in 2003. The SL55 had GPRS,
a WAP browser, polyphonic ringtones, but it didn't have
Bluetooth or a camera.. and certainly nothing fancy
like an MP3 player. Of course, it could make phone calls
and send text messages too, and really that's all the
SL55 was designed to be.. a compact, attractive phone
for people who really just need basic functionality.
The SL55 was quite a successful phone,
but Siemens could never really come up with a suitable
successor. The SL65
and SL75
were better specified but lacked the charm of the original
SL55, and eventually the whole Siemens Mobile business
folded.
For a time, Siemens showed great promise
with a number of highly innovative designs, but they
never could reliably sort out their quality control
issues. Ultimately the SL55 stands as a reminder of
what might have been, and it still calls out for a modern
remake.
Siemens
SL55 at a glanceSource:
GSMArena
|
|
Available:
|
2003 |
Network:
|
GSM 900 / 1800 / 1900 |
Data:
|
GPRS |
Screen:
|
101 x 80 pixels, 4096 colours |
Camera:
|
No |
| Size: | Compact
slider 82 x 45 x 22mm / 79 grams |
| Bluetooth: | No |
| Memory card: | No |
| Infra-red: | No |
| Polyphonic: | Yes |
| Java: | Yes |
| GPS: | No |
| Battery life: | 5 hours talk / 9 days standby |




It's
quite a tall phone, coming in at 129 x 47 x 17mm, but
combined with an ergonomic design, it means that the
microphone is somewhere in the vicinity of the mouth
when in use, which is handy. The large size also means
that the 6310i is quite robust - most surviving ones
will have suffered a few bad drops in their time.