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Display
- 2.4 Inch TFT 262k
Colour Screen (240 x 320 Pixels)
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Ringtones
- MP3 Ringtones
- Polyphonic Ringtones (64 Voices)
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Talk Time
- 5 Hours Talk Time
- 440 Hours Standby Time
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Camera
- 2 Megapixel Camera
- Fixed Focus
- Photo Setting
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Organiser
- Calendar
- Alarm Clock
- Calculator
- Phone Book
- Stopwatch
- Timer
- Notes
- Touch Screen Dialling
- QWERTY Keyboard
- Handsfree Speaker
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Weight & Size
- 108 g
- 101.5 x 51 x 16.8 mm
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Messaging
- SMS (Text Messaging)
- MMS (Multimedia Messaging)
- Email
- Instant Messaging
- Predictive Text
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Video
- Video Record (MPEG4 & H263)
- Video Player
- Video Settings
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Memory
- 15 Mbytes Memory
- Plus up to 4 Gbytes MicroSD™
- Memory Card Support
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Sound
- Music Player (MP3, AAC,
AAC+ & eAAC+)
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Connectivity
- USB - EDGE - Bluetooth® - GPRS
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LG KS360 Pink
Whether you're a lolly goth, a mod, a prep, a nerd, a princess, a jock, an emo or a geek, we're guessing the WebSlider will appeal to anyone aged between 12 and 16. The mix of glossy black plastics and glitzy metallic finishes (either red, pink, silver or blue) gives the WebSlider the appearance of a phone that's twice as expensive - though this isn't saying much considering its super cheap price tag.
On the front of the phone is a 2.4-inch colour display featuring numeric touchscreen input. What this means is that the touchscreen element is only active for entering phone numbers, and only after you press the "number pad" button next to the green calling key. The rest of the menus are navigated using the standard five-way nav keys.
Similar to the Hiptop Slide, the WebSlider slides open horizontally revealing a full three-row QWERTY keypad. Also similar to the Hiptop is the tiny size of each key. Perhaps it's that practice makes perfect, but we've found it far easier to type on the WebSlider than on the Hiptop, and those with smaller fingers will no doubt find it easier still.
Around the handset we find a microSD card slot and combo charging/headphones port on the right side and a volume rocker and camera key on the left. The location of the camera key is the opposite of what we'd expect to see, and means you hold the camera upside-down to take pics, but this hasn't taken us very long to get used to.