
You could maybe fit 100 photos in there but no more than a handful of songs. The K800 came with only 64MB of internal memory.
SONY DIGITAL CAMERA CYBERSHOT BLUETOOTH
Of course, Bluetooth headphones weren’t as common in 2006 as they are today, but it’s still impressive. The proprietary port that it used to attach headphones wasn’t great though.īut you know what was? The A2DP support, which enabled playing music over Bluetooth in stereo. This wasn’t a Walkman phone, but it was a fully capable music player. On the left of the phone was a Play/Pause button and long-pressing the volume rocker on the right could skip songs. These buttons also helped you navigate the image gallery. In the camera, they could switch between shooting modes (e.g. For example, there are two buttons above the screen that supplement the soft keys below it. The Sony Ericsson K800 was quite capable, once you’ve read through the user manual. Facebook was still new and exclusive to college students, Instagram wasn’t a thing – how else would you share photos of your food or your cat? Joking aside, this was a feature ahead of its time. If you hit the Blog This option in the menus, the photo would be uploaded to where they would be available for all the world to see. You could send them in an MMS too, of course, but that way they could only reach your friends. What to do with your best photos? Well, you could copy them to your computer using a USB cable, over Bluetooth or infrared. Two stage shutter key and volume/zoom rocker on the right You could save one or several of these photos.
SONY DIGITAL CAMERA CYBERSHOT FULL
It took 9 full resolution photos that included shots from before you pressed the shutter and shots after that. The BestPic feature was impressive for the time. The handset was fairly chunky, but that also meant that there was enough room for a xenon flash. It had a two-stage shutter key, the volume rocker controlled zoom. The phone really did look and feel like a Sony digital camera. It was covered up with a sliding lens cover that automatically launched the camera when opened. It deserved it too, as the 3.2 MP camera on its back was among the best mobile shooters of the time. It was released in mid-2006 and became the first Sony Ericsson phone to officially sport the Cyber-shot logo. From one angle it looked like a Cyber-shot digital camera, from another like a phone, look at the left side and you’ll see a button for the music player, inside was a capable graphics chip for 3D gaming. The Sony Ericsson K800 was a phone with many faces.
