Nokia 3310 sparks wave of nostalgia as it goes on sale

  • Published
Media caption,

Rory Cellan-Jones swaps his smartphone for a retro Nokia 3310

The rebooted Nokia 3310 has gone on sale, nearly 17 years after the original made its debut.

The phone, which has a two megapixel camera and relies on 2.5G connectivity to offer only limited internet access, is being sold for £49.99.

The battery is claimed to offer up to 22 hours of talk time, and up to a month in standby mode.

One expert said its success depended on how much people would be willing to pay for a device that "oozes nostalgia".

"For someone like me, it's an exciting day," commented Ben Wood, from technology consultancy CCS Insight.

"If you put this in the hands of a millennial who's addicted to Snapchat, of course it's the wrong phone.

"But with over 20 million mobile phones in the UK, approximately one million are feature phones, or 'dumb phones' if you want to call them that. This is still a sizeable market.

"This is a premium version, so the question is how much are people willing to pay for that?"

Image source, Twitter / Madras Lion
Image source, Carphone Warehouse
Image caption,
Dom Joly gets his hands on a suitably sized version of the new handset

Youtube technology vlogger Safwan Ahmedia was one of the first to buy one.

Image source, Twitter / Safwan Ahmedia
Image source, Twitter / Jess Volpe
Image source, Twitter / Jonathan Beckett

"The interest shown for this reimagined classic has been backed up by incredibly strong levels of pre-registration, and we have already sold out of very limited stock online", Carphone Warehouse's Andrew Wilson said.

And a spokesperson for Vodafone told the BBC: "We are delighted to be stocking the phone as demand has been really high".

EE is registering levels of interest in the device, but O2 and Three said they had no plans to sell the handset.

The new device was announced at February's Mobile World Congress technology show in Barcelona.

It is being built under licence by the Finnish start-up company HMD Global, which also makes several Nokia-branded Android smartphones.

Nokia produced more than 126 million of the original 3310 handsets between 2000 and 2005, when they were phased out.

But it has not made mobile phones since 2013, when it sold its handset business to Microsoft.