Moto Razr V3The Moto Raza V3 had a number of design choices that set the device apart from the competition. It had the thinnest profile at the time on a clamshell set, sported an electroluminescent keypad made out of a single metal wafer and used an industry standard mini USB port for data, battery charger and headphones, all in an aluminum body with an external glass screen.
Nokia N95The phone came with a fancy two-way slider to access either media playback buttons or a numeric keypad. The N85's functions include those of a camera phone and portable media player, in addition to offering e-mail, web browsing, local Wi-Fi connectivity, text messaging and a built-in GPS receiver, satellite navigation using no external hardware. The N85 ran on Symbian OS v9.3, with an S60 3rd Edition platform with Feature Pack 2.
Sony Walkman W880i The phone was popular due to its tiny dimensions. At only 9.4 mm thick, the W880 was one of the few phones on the market that were thinner than 1 cm. The W880 features a 2.0-megapixel camera and it also comes with Walkman Player v2.0, which gives a faster interface with very few differences from the previous version. Other features include photo/video editing, picture blogging, web gallery uploading, QCIF video recording, and 3G data transferring capabilities of up to 384 kbit/s.
Nokia 1100Over 250 million Nokia 1100s have been sold since its launch in late 2003, making it the world's best selling phone handset and the best selling consumer electronics device in the world at the time. The 1100 features a built-in flashlight,traditional-style navigational keypad, built-in AOL Instant Messenger client.
Blackberry curveIt is one of those phones that is still sorely missed. The qwerty keyboard, BBM, and that Blackberry OS; there would still be many takers for the Blackberry Curve.