Nokia 2720 Ee

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Gwenda Arguin

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Aug 4, 2024, 8:17:29 PM8/4/24
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Ifthe unexpected happens, Nokia 2720 Flip emergency button could bring peace of mind. Pressing the button sends an emergency text message, including the current location, and calls five emergency contacts in the address book.

As well as sending a text, once the emergency button is pushed it will ring the five chosen contacts in the address book one by one, on loudspeaker, until it makes a connection to an emergency contact.


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TM and currentYear HMD Global. All rights reserved. Bertel Jungin aukio 9, 02600 Espoo, Finland. Business ID 2724044-2. HMD Global Oy is a licensee of the Nokia brand for phones & tablets. Nokia is a registered trademark of Nokia Corporation.


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So what is the problem? I entered the pin on both devices, I gave permission on my nokia for the pair to occur, but then it just continues to say "not connected" on my ipad in the bluetooth section of the general settings. I'm trying to back up my contacts from my phone, several hundred of them. I want to send them to the contacts on the ipad, and then use an app like phonecopy to back it all up in the cloud. So simple but I've already spent a ridiculous amount of time trying to fix. My laptop has no bluetooth. Any help would be great, thanks.


Thanks ckuan. I saw that page yesterday on my own, but I didn't gather from it that it doesn't support file transfer. (I didn't even realize that backing up my phone would necessarily fall under the "file transfer" category, as opposed to the other profiles listed for my phone's bluetooth like "generic access," "generic object exchange," or "SIM access.")


I know very little about this stuff so I'm sure you're right that it doesn't support file transfer, and that what I'm trying to do is indeed a file transfer. But that wasn't clear from the page you linked to. I can't even find the words "file transfer" on that page. After reviewing that page again, I suspect the problem is that the ipad2 doesn't support the "phone book access protocol" with "phone book" meaning contacts. I wonder why not? Would be nice to put all my contacts on my ipad. The way it is now I just have a bunch of contacts with only their email addresses on the ipad. But thanks again ckuan. I'll quit trying to do the impossible. : - )


Yes, Nokia has a software package for importing contacts. But the phone only can connect via bluetooth, which my computer doesn't have. Which is why I was trying to connect to my ipad. I borrowed a friend's macbook air and copied all the photos and stuff over except for the contacts. For that I downloaded a program called SyncMate and used that to import my 400 contacts to the address book. Now the problem is I can't find the "address book" program on the computer. My friend was trying to save space and says she may have deleted it since she doesn't use it. But SyncMate says it imported the contacts successfully, so that's weird. I can't find them, but that is an issue for another forum probably. : - )


OK, I finally got this taken care of. I used a 3rd computer that still had the address book program. I put syncmate on that computer as well, used it to move my nokia contacts to the address book program. Then I copied the address book program from that 3rd computer onto a jump drive. I then pasted the address book program onto the 2nd computer that was missing it before. Then I downloaded an app from the people at phonecopy.com, and used that app to backup everything in the address book (my nokia contacts) to the cloud. I also backed up all my contacts from my ipad (my email contacts) to the same place, giving me one central location for all my contacts in case I were to do something dumb like go into a hot tub with my phone in my pocket (yes, I did this once). And now I can use the 1st computer, my usual windows laptop, to log in to phonecopy.com and edit/view/save those contacts. Thanks ckuan for your suggestions!


Your first and official option is to go into a Nokia Care point, assuming there is one nearby, and just ask them is it possible to do so. If there isn't one close to you, maybe just make a phone call to the nearest one you can find.


Assuming that doesn't work out, it's possible on some Nokia phones to change the product code, so that you can update a different firmware variant. you need a special software called NSS to change the code, and the usual Nokia firmware update applications from Nokia.com for your phone. An example for how to do this for the 5800 is here: -to-change-product-code-on-nokia-mobiles-like-n97-and-5800/2830


The Nokia 2720 Flip is a Nokia-branded flip phone developed by HMD Global. The 2720 Flip was created, as an updated version of the Nokia 2720 Fold, which debuted in 2009.[2][3] It was unveiled at IFA 2019 together with the Nokia 110 (2019), Nokia 800 Tough, Nokia 6.2, and Nokia 7.2.[4]It runs the KaiOS operating system, a web-based operating system based on B2G OS.


Design

Glossy and mirrored, the shiny Nokia 2720 Fold cuts a handsome figure coming out of the box. But hold this handset up to the light and you'll notice you've already besmirched its plastic coat with an endless number of smudges. Though sharply angled at its top, the Fold gentles into rounded corners at its bottom edge. At 3.66 inches tall, 1.81 inches wide, and 0.78 inch deep and 3.18 ounces, the Fold is light yet sturdy in our hands, with a thick hinge. The Fold flips up easily enough, and those with larger thumbs shouldn't have complaints.


The 1.36-inch black-and-white external display shows the time and caller ID (but not a photo--boo), and tells you when the keypad is locked. You can't adjust the backlight time, which is too bad, but squeezing the volume rocker will flash the clock. On the Fold's right spine are the volume rocker and a proprietary Nokia charger port. On the left spine, you'll find a 2.5mm headphone jack. Since the Fold has a music player, it's shame that this isn't a standard 3.5mm jack.


On the back, the Fold's 1.3-megapixel camera angles slightly upward. Fortunately, you can rest your finger below the lip to apply extra stabilizing control. The phone lacks a camera flash and a mirror for self portraits, but its shiny surface is enough for vanity shots.


The Fold opens to a 1.8-inch screen with 128x160-pixel resolution and 65,000 colors. You can adjust font size, but not the brightness or backlighting time. Below is a four-way navigation toggle and central OK button. Nokia uses a similar toggle square on other phones, including the Nokia 2320 GoPhone, but we found it occasionally clumsy. The laggy response on the screen's interface didn't earn any points in our books, either. The backlit keys on the dial pad are large and flush, but texting and dialing worked fine. The Fold's two keypad shortcuts trigger the music player and the phone's silent mode, and you can map more keys to more shortcuts in the Settings menu. Activating the camera isn't hard from the menu, but we'd much prefer a dedicated key on the dial pad or spine.


Features

You can squeeze 500 contacts into the address book, with room in each entry for five phone numbers and an e-mail address. Groups are supported, and you can pair a contact with a photo. Just keep in mind that photo ID won't appear on the external display. Unfortunately, the Fold's 16 preinstalled polyphonic tones and eight alerts don't pair with a contact, but they will with a group. When silence is golden, vibrate or silent mode can sub in for ringtones.


Inside, you'll find text and multimedia messaging, instant messaging, and WAP browsing, with Opera Mini available for some regions. The organizer contains the usual alarm clock, calendar, to-do list, and a memo pad, and throws in a stopwatch and timer. Six Java games, including Tetris, Pacman, and The Oregon Trail, await you in the Games folder.


A handful of more-advanced features belie the Fold's small screen and low-end resolution. On top of Bluetooth support and hands-free speakerphone, there's support for IMAP, POP, and STMP e-mail messages, including Gmail, and support for attachments. We could never get them to open, however. Two other tidbits you'll find on the Fold include a voice recorder and the capability to sync and back up data with another phone or computer.


The press of a button shifts you from photo to video mode, where the camera records 3GP clips up to 2 minutes long--and can play back 3GP and MP4 files. The Fold churns out videos at a rate of up to 15 frames per second. As with the camera, there's a 4x digital zoom. With 10MB internal memory, however, space can fill up fast.


The built-in music player for MP3 and AAC songs doubles as an FM radio if you've purchased a wireless headset with a built-in antenna, but you won't crank out any FM tunes out of the box. You can repeat songs on the player or shuffle them, and mute the audio. Without a dedicated store for easily buying music but as with the camera, music is an incidental selling point; the Fold just isn't positioned or provisioned to be a strong music device.

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